NATIONS FUND TRUST
485BPOS, 1997-02-28
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              As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
                              on February 28, 1997
                       Registration No. 2-97817; 811-4305

- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549
                                    FORM N-1A

           REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933     [ ]
                         Post-Effective Amendment No. 46               [X]

       REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940 [ ]
                                Amendment No. 48                       [X]

                        (Check appropriate box or boxes)
                             -----------------------
                               NATIONS FUND TRUST
               (Exact Name of Registrant as specified in Charter)
                                111 Center Street
                           Little Rock, Arkansas 72201
          (Address of Principal Executive Offices, including Zip Code)
                           --------------------------
       Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code: (800) 321-7854
                              Richard H. Blank, Jr.
                                c/o Stephens Inc.
                                111 Center Street
                           Little Rock, Arkansas 72201
                     (Name and Address of Agent for Service)
                                 With copies to:
              Robert M. Kurucza, Esq.                Carl Frischling, Esq.
              Marco E. Adelfio, Esq.                 Kramer, Levin, Naftalis
              Morrison & Foerster LLP                    & Frankel
              2000 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.           919 3rd Avenue
              Suite 5500                             New York, New York 10022
              Washington, D.C.  20006

It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box):
      [X]  Immediately upon filing pursuant        [ ]  on (date), pursuant
              to Rule 485(b), or                          to Rule 485(b), or
      [ ]  60 days after filing pursuant           [ ]  on (date) pursuant
              to Rule 485(a), or                          to Rule 485(a).
      [ ]  75 days after filing pursuant to        [ ]  on (date) pursuant to
              paragraph (a)(2)                            paragraph (a)(2) of
                                                          rule 485

If appropriate, check the following box:

      [ ]  this post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for
              a previously filed post-effective amendment.

No filing fee is required under the Securities Act of 1933 because an indefinite
number of shares of beneficial  interest in the  Registrant,  without par value,
has  previously  been  registered  pursuant to Rule 24f-2  under the  Investment
Company Act of 1940,  as amended.  The  Registrant  filed on May 24,  1996,  the
notice required by Rule 24f-2 for its fiscal period ended March 31, 1996.

<PAGE>

                                EXPLANATORY NOTE

     This  Post-Effective  Amendment  No. 46 to the  Registration  Statement  of
Nations  Fund Trust (the  "Trust") is being filed in order to include  Financial
information  for the  Primary  A,  Investor  A and  Investor C Shares of Nations
Managed  Index  Fund to  satisfy  an  undertaking  to file  unaudited  Financial
statements within four to six months of the Fund's commencement of operations.


<PAGE>

                               NATIONS FUND TRUST
                              CROSS REFERENCE SHEET

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Part A
Item No.                                                               Prospectus

  <S>  <C>                                                             <C>  
  1.   Cover Page ................................................     Cover Page

  2.   Synopsis ..................................................     Expenses Summary

  3.   Condensed Financial
      Information ................................................     Financial Highlights; How
                                                                       Performance Is Shown
  4.   General Description of
      Registrant .................................................     Cover Page; Objectives; How
                                                                       Objectives Are Pursued; Organization And
                                                                       History

  5.  Management of the Fund .....................................     How The Funds Are Managed

  6.  Capital Stock and Other
      Securities .................................................     How To Buy Shares; How The
                                                                       Funds Value Their Shares; How Dividends
                                                                       And Distributions Are Made; Tax
                                                                       Information
  7.  Purchase of Securities Being
      Offered ....................................................     Cover Page; How To Buy Shares

  8.  Redemption or Repurchase ...................................     How To Redeem Shares; How To
                                                                       Exchange Shares

  9.  Legal Proceedings ..........................................     Organization And History



Part B
Item No.

10.   Cover Page..................................................     Cover Page

11.   Table of Contents...........................................     Table of Contents

12.   General Information and
      History.....................................................     Introduction
</TABLE>

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

<S>   <C>                                                              <C>
13.   Investment Objectives and
      Policies....................................................     Additional Information on Fund
                                                                       Investments


14.   Management of the Registrant................................     Trustees And Officers

15.   Control Persons and Principal
      Holders of Securities.......................................     Miscellaneous--Certain Record
                                                                       Holders

16.   Investment Advisory and Other Services......................     Investment Advisory, Administration,
                                                                       Custody, Transfer Agency,
                                                                       Shareholder Servicing,
                                                                       Shareholder Administration And
                                                                       Distribution Agreements

17.   Brokerage Allocation .......................................     Fund Transactions and Brokerage--
                                                                       General Brokerage Policy
18.   Capital Stock and Other
      Securities..................................................     Description Of Shares;
                                                                       Investment Advisory,Administration,
                                                                       Custody, Transfer Agency,
                                                                       Shareholder Servicing And
                                                                       Distribution Agreements
19.   Purchase, Redemption and Pricing
      of Securities Being Offered.................................     Net Asset Value -- Purchases
                                                                       And Redemptions; Distributor

20.   Tax Status..................................................     Additional Information Concerning
                                                                       Taxes

21.   Underwriters................................................     Investment Advisory, Administration
                                                                       Custody, Transfer Agency,
                                                                       Shareholder Servicing,
                                                                       Shareholder Administration And
                                                                       Distribution Agreements


22.   Calculation of Performance Data.............................     Additional Information on
                                                                       Performance


23.   Financial Statements........................................     Independent Accountant and
                                                                       Reports

</TABLE>

<PAGE>


Part C
Item No.                                                  Other Information

                                                          Information
                                                          required to be
                                                          included in
                                                          Part C is set
                                                          forth under the
                                                          appropriate
                                                          Item, so
                                                          numbered, in
                                                          Part C of this
                                                          Document



<PAGE>

                               NATIONS FUND TRUST

     SUPPLEMENT DATED FEBRUARY 28, 1997 TO PROSPECTUS DATED OCTOBER 15, 1996

       The prospectus for the Primary A Shares of Nations Managed Index Fund of
Nations Fund Trust is hereby supplemented and amended by inserting the following
financial information under the new heading "Financial Highlights", which
follows the section entitled "Expenses Summary" on page 5:

FOR A PRIMARY A SHARE OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT THE PERIOD
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                              Period Ended
                                                                           January 31, 1997*
PRIMARY A SHARES:                                                             (unaudited)

<S>                                                                              <C>
Net Asset Value, beginning of period....................................         $10.00
                                                                                 ------
Income from investment operations:
Net investment income...................................................          0.10
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments.........................          2.31
                                                                                  ----
Total from investment operations........................................          2.41
Distributions to shareholders:
Distributions from net investment income................................         (0.09)
                                                                                 ------
Net Asset Value, end of period..........................................         $12.32
                                                                                 ======
Total return +..........................................................         24.15%
                                                                                 ======

Ratios to average net assets/supplemental data:
Net assets, end of period (in 000's)....................................        $35,261
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets.......................        0.50%**
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets....................        1.87%**
Portfolio turnover rate.................................................           7%
Average commission rate (per share of security).........................        $0.0253
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets
   without waivers and expense reimbursements...........................        1.09%**
Net investment income per share
   without waivers and expense reimbursements...........................         $0.07

</TABLE>

- ---------------------
*  Nations Managed Index Fund's Primary A Shares commenced operations on 
   August 1, 1996.
**Annualized.
+  Total return represents aggregate total return for the period indicated and
   does not reflect any applicable sales charges.


<PAGE>


                               NATIONS FUND TRUST

     SUPPLEMENT DATED FEBRUARY 28, 1997 TO PROSPECTUS DATED OCTOBER 15, 1996

       The prospectus for the Investor A Shares of Nations Managed Index Fund of
Nations Fund Trust is hereby supplemented and amended by inserting the following
financial information under the new heading "Financial Highlights", which
follows the section entitled "Expenses Summary" on page 5:

FOR AN INVESTOR A SHARE OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT THE PERIOD
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                              Period Ended
                                                                           January 31, 1997*
INVESTOR A SHARES:                                                            (unaudited)

<S>                                                                              <C>
Net Asset Value, beginning of period....................................         $10.25
                                                                                 ------
Income from investment operations:
Net investment income...................................................          0.09
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments.........................          2.06
                                                                                  ----
Total from investment operations........................................          2.15
Distributions to shareholders:
Distributions from net investment income................................         (0.08)
                                                                                 ------
Net Asset Value, end of period..........................................         $12.32
                                                                                 ======
Total return +..........................................................         21.07%
                                                                                 ======

Ratios to average net assets/supplemental data:
Net assets, end of period (in 000's)....................................         $1,840
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets.......................        0.62%**
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets....................        1.75%**
Portfolio turnover rate.................................................           7%
Average commission rate (per share of security).........................        $0.0253
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets
   without waivers and expense reimbursements...........................        1.21%**
Net investment income per share
   without waivers and expense reimbursements...........................         $0.06

</TABLE>

- ---------------------
*  Nations Managed Index Fund's Investor A Shares commenced operations on 
   September 3, 1996.
**Annualized.
+  Total return represents aggregate total return for the period indicated and 
   does not reflect any applicable sales charges.


<PAGE>


                               NATIONS FUND TRUST

     SUPPLEMENT DATED FEBRUARY 28, 1997 TO PROSPECTUS DATED OCTOBER 15, 1996

       The prospectus for the Investor C Shares of Nations Managed Index Fund of
Nations Fund Trust is hereby supplemented and amended by inserting the following
financial information under the new heading "Financial Highlights", which
follows the section entitled "Expenses Summary" on page 5:

FOR AN INVESTOR C SHARE OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT THE PERIOD
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                              Period Ended
                                                                           January 31, 1997*
INVESTOR C SHARES:                                                            (unaudited)


<S>                                                                              <C>
Net Asset Value, beginning of period....................................         $10.94
                                                                                 ------
Income from investment operations:
Net investment income...................................................          0.05
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments.........................          1.37
                                                                                  ----
Total from investment operations........................................          1.42
Distributions to shareholders:
Distributions from net investment income................................         (0.04)
                                                                                 ------
Net Asset Value, end of period..........................................         $12.32
                                                                                 ======
Total return +..........................................................         13.01%
                                                                                 ======

Ratios to average net assets/supplemental data:
Net assets, end of period (in 000's)....................................          $53
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets.......................        0.98%**
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets....................        1.39%**
Portfolio turnover rate.................................................           7%
Average commission rate (per share of security).........................        $0.0253
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets
   without waivers and expense reimbursements...........................        1.56%**
Net investment income per share
   without waivers and expense reimbursements...........................         $0.03

</TABLE>

- ---------------------
*  Nations Managed Index Fund's Investor C Shares commenced operations on
   October 4, 1996.
**Annualized.
+  Total return represents aggregate total return for the period indicated and 
   does not reflect any applicable sales charges.

<PAGE>

Prospectus


                                    PRIMARY A SHARES
                                    OCTOBER 15, 1996

 

This Prospectus describes NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
and NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND (the
"Funds") of Nations Fund Trust, an open-end
management investment company in the Nations Fund
Family ("Nations Fund" or "Nations Fund Family").
This Prospectus describes one class of shares of the
Funds -- Primary A Shares.

 

This Prospectus sets forth concisely the information
about the Funds that a prospective purchaser of
Primary A Shares should consider before investing.
Investors should read this Prospectus and retain it
for future reference. Additional information about
Nations Fund Trust is contained in a separate
Statement of Additional Information (the "SAI") that
has been filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the "SEC") and is available upon request
without charge by writing or calling Nations Fund at
its address or telephone number shown below. The
SAI, dated October 15, 1996, is incorporated by
reference in its entirety into this Prospectus.
NationsBanc Advisors, Inc. ("NBAI") is the
investment adviser to the Funds. TradeStreet
Investment Associates, Inc. ("TradeStreet") is
investment sub-adviser to the Funds. As used herein
the "Adviser" shall mean NBAI and/or TradeStreet as
the context may require.

 

SHARES OF NATIONS FUND ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OTHER
OBLIGATIONS OF, OR ISSUED, ENDORSED OR GUARANTEED
BY, NATIONSBANK, N.A. ("NATIONSBANK") OR ANY OF ITS
AFFILIATES. SUCH SHARES ARE NOT INSURED BY THE U.S.
GOVERNMENT, THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD OR ANY OTHER
GOVERNMENT AGENCY. AN INVESTMENT IN THE FUNDS
INVOLVES CERTAIN RISKS, INCLUDING POSSIBLE LOSS OF
PRINCIPAL.

 
NATIONSBANK AND CERTAIN OF ITS AFFILIATES PROVIDE
CERTAIN OTHER SERVICES TO NATIONS FUND, FOR WHICH
THEY ARE COMPENSATED. STEPHENS INC., WHICH IS NOT
AFFILIATED WITH NATIONSBANK, IS THE SPONSOR AND
ADMINISTRATOR AND SERVES AS THE DISTRIBUTOR FOR
NATIONS FUND.
 
THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR
DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION, NOR
HAS THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY
STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY
OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION
TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

                                                    Nations
                                                    Managed
                                                    Index Fund
                                                    Nations
                                                    Managed
                                                    SmallCap
                                                    Index Fund


 
                                                    For Fund information call:
                                                    1-800-626-2275
                                                    Nations Fund
                                                    c/o Stephens Inc.
                                                    One NationsBank Plaza
                                                    33rd Floor
                                                    Charlotte, NC 28255
                                                    NATIONS FUND
 

TR-96699-1096

 
<PAGE>
                            Table  Of  Contents


About The Funds


 
                            Prospectus Summary                                 3
 
                            Expenses Summary                                   4
 

                            Objectives                                         5

 

                            How The Objectives Are Pursued                     5

 
                            How Performance Is Shown                           7
 

                            How The Funds Are Managed                          8

 

                            Organization And History                          10


About Your
Investment

 
 

                            How To Buy Shares                                 11

 

                            How To Redeem Shares                              12

 

                            How To Exchange Shares                            12

 

                            How The Funds Value Their Shares                  13

 

                            How Dividends And Distributions Are Made;
                            Tax Information                                   13

 

                            Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities                14

 
 

                            NO PERSON HAS BEEN AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY
                            INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS NOT
                            CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS, OR IN THE FUNDS' SAI
                            INCORPORATED HEREIN BY REFERENCE, IN CONNECTION WITH
                            THE OFFERING MADE BY THIS PROSPECTUS AND, IF GIVEN
                            OR MADE, SUCH INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS MUST
                            NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED BY
                            NATIONS FUND OR ITS DISTRIBUTOR. THIS PROSPECTUS
                            DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFERING BY NATIONS FUND OR
                            BY THE DISTRIBUTOR IN ANY JURISDICTION IN WHICH SUCH
                            OFFERING MAY NOT LAWFULLY BE MADE.

 
2
 
<PAGE>
About The Funds
 
   Prospectus Summary
 
(Bullet) TYPE OF COMPANY: Open-end management investment company.
 

(Bullet) INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES:

 

     (BULLET) Nations Managed Index Fund's investment objective is to seek, over
              the long-term, to provide a total return which (gross of fees and
              expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard & Poor's 500
              Composite Stock Price Index.

 

     (Bullet) Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund's investment objective is to
              seek, over the long-term, to provide a total return which (gross
              of fees and expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard &
              Poor's SmallCap 600 Index.

 

     (Bullet) When consistent with the Funds' objectives, the Funds will employ
              various techniques to manage capital gain distributions.

 

(Bullet) INVESTMENT ADVISER: NationsBanc Advisors, Inc. serves as the investment
         adviser to the Funds. NBAI provides investment advice to more than 43
         investment company portfolios in the Nations Fund Family. TradeStreet
         Investment Associates, Inc. provides sub-advisory services to the
         Funds. See "How The Funds Are Managed."

 

(Bullet) DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations
         Managed SmallCap Index Fund declare and pay dividends from net
         investment income each calendar quarter. Each Fund's net realized
         capital gains, including net short-term capital gains, are distributed
         at least annually.

 

(Bullet) RISK FACTORS: Although the Adviser seeks to achieve the investment
         objective of the Funds, there is no assurance that it will be able to
         do so. Investments in the Funds are not insured against loss of
         principal. Investments by the Funds in common stocks and other equity
         securities are subject to stock market risk, which is the risk that the
         value of the stocks the Funds hold may decline over short or even
         extended periods. Certain of the Funds' permissible investments may
         constitute derivative securities. Certain types of derivative
         securities can, under certain circumstances, significantly increase an
         investor's exposure to market or other risks. For a discussion of these
         and other factors, see "How Objectives Are Pursued -- Risk
         Considerations" and "Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities."

 

(Bullet) MINIMUM PURCHASE: The minimum initial investment per record holder is
         $500,000 for Nations Managed Index Fund and $500,000 for Nations
         Managed SmallCap Index Fund. See "How To Buy Shares."

 
                                                                               3
 
<PAGE>
   Expenses Summary
 

Expenses are one of several factors to consider when investing in the Funds. The
following tables summarize shareholder transaction and operating expenses for
Primary A Shares of the Funds. The Examples show the cumulative expenses
attributable to a hypothetical $1,000 investment in Primary A Shares of the
indicated Fund over specified periods.

 
PRIMARY A SHARES
 
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                            Nations
                                                                                                            Managed
                                                                                                          Index Fund
<S>                                                                                                     <C>
Sales Load Imposed on Purchases                                                                              None
Deferred Sales Load                                                                                          None
 

                                                                                                            Nations
                                                                                                            Managed
                                                                                                           SmallCap
                                                                                                          Index Fund
Sales Load Imposed on Purchases                                                                              None
Deferred Sales Load                                                                                          None
 
</TABLE>

 
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES
(as a percentage of average net assets)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                                                            Nations
                                                                                                            Managed
                                                                                                          Index Fund
<S>                                                                                                     <C>

Management Fees (After Fee Waivers)                                                                          .30%
All Other Expenses                                                                                           .20%
Total Operating Expenses (After Fee Waivers)                                                                 .50%
 


                                                                                                            Nations
                                                                                                            Managed
                                                                                                           SmallCap
                                                                                                          Index Fund

Management Fees (After Fee Waivers)                                                                          .30%
All Other Expenses                                                                                           .20%
Total Operating Expenses (After Fee Waivers)                                                                 .50%
 
</TABLE>

 

EXAMPLES:

 

You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment in Primary A Shares
of the Funds, assuming (1) a 5% annual return and (2) redemption at the end of
each time period.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                                                               Nations
                                                                                                               Managed
                                                                                                             Index Fund
<S>                                                                                                        <C> 
1 Year                                                                                                           $5
3 Years                                                                                                          $16
 

                                                                                                               Nations
                                                                                                               Managed
                                                                                                              SmallCap
                                                                                                             Index Fund
1 Year                                                                                                           $5
3 Years                                                                                                          $16
</TABLE>

 

The purpose of the foregoing tables is to assist an investor in understanding
the various shareholder transaction and operating expenses that an investor in
Primary A Shares will bear either directly or indirectly. The figures in the
above tables are based on estimates for the fiscal year and have been restated
as necessary to reflect anticipated fee waivers. There is no assurance that any
fee waivers and reimbursements will continue beyond the current fiscal year. If
fee waivers and/or reimbursements are discontinued, the amounts contained in the
"Examples" above may increase. For a more complete description of the Funds'
operating expenses, see "How The Funds Are Managed."

 

Absent fee waivers, "Management Fees" and "Total Operating Expenses" would be
 .50% and .70%, respectively, for both Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations
Managed SmallCap Index Fund.

 
THE FOREGOING SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED TO BE AN ACTUAL REPRESENTATION OF PAST OR
FUTURE PERFORMANCE. ACTUAL EXPENSES AND RATES OF RETURN MAY BE GREATER OR LESS
THAN THOSE SHOWN.
 
4
 
<PAGE>

   Objectives

 

NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND: Nations Managed Index Fund's investment objective is
to seek, over the long-term, to provide a total return which (gross of fees and
expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard & Poor's 500 Composite Stock
Price Index.

 

NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND: Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund's
investment objective is to seek, over the long-term, to provide a total return
which (gross of fees and expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard &
Poor's SmallCap 600 Index.

 

   How The Objectives Are Pursued

 

NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND: In seeking to achieve its investment objective, the
Fund will invest in selected equity securities that are included in the Standard
& Poor's 500 Composite Stock Price Index (the "S&P 500 Index")1. The S&P 500
Index is a value weighted index consisting of 500 common stocks chosen for
market size, liquidity and industry group representation.

 

Unlike traditional index funds, the Fund has a "managed" aspect. The Adviser
believes that a managed equity index portfolio can provide investors with
positive incremental performance relative to the S&P 500 Index while minimizing
the downside risk of underperforming the Index over time.

 

The initial stock universe considered by the Adviser is the S&P 500 Index. The
Adviser ranks the attractiveness of each security according to a multi-factor
valuation model. Both value and momentum factors are considered in the ranking
process. Value factors such as book value, earnings yield and cash flow measure
a stock's intrinsic worth versus its market price, while momentum
characteristics such as price momentum, earnings growth and earnings
acceleration measure a stock relative to others in the same industry. Each stock
is assigned a ranking from 1 to 10 (best to worst). The Adviser then screens out
the lower rated stocks resulting in a portfolio of 350 to 400 holdings that
capture the investment characteristics of the Index.

 

In addition, when consistent with the Fund's investment objective, the Fund will
employ various techniques to manage capital gain distributions. These techniques
include utilizing a share identification methodology whereby the Fund will
specifically identify each lot of shares of portfolio securities that it holds,
which will allow the Fund to sell first those specific shares with the highest
tax basis in order to reduce the amount of recognized capital gains as compared
with a sale of identical portfolio securities, if any, with a lower tax basis.
The Fund will sell first those shares with the highest tax basis only when it is
in the best interest of the Fund to do so, and reserves the right to sell other
shares when appropriate. In addition, the Fund may, at times, sell portfolio
securities in order to realize capital losses. Such capital losses would be used
to offset realized capital gains thereby reducing capital gain distributions.
Additionally, the Adviser will, consistent with the multi-factor valuation model
discussed above, employ a low portfolio turnover strategy designed to defer the
realization of capital gains.

 

Under normal conditions, the Adviser will attempt to invest as much of the
Fund's assets as is practical and, in any event the Fund will invest at least
65% of its total assets, in common stocks which are included in the S&P 500
Index. The Fund is expected, however, to maintain a position in high-quality
short-term debt securities and money market instruments to meet redemption
requests. If the Adviser believes that market conditions warrant a temporary
defensive posture, the Fund may invest without limitation in high-quality
short-term debt securities and money market instruments. These securities and
money market instruments may include domestic and foreign commercial paper,
certificates of deposit, bankers' acceptances and time deposits, U.S. Government
obligations ("U.S. Government Obligations") and repurchase agreements.

 

The Fund also may invest in certain specified derivative securities including:
exchange-traded options; over-the-counter options executed with primary dealers,
including long calls and puts and covered calls to enhance return; and U.S.
exchange-traded financial futures approved by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission ("CFTC") and options thereon for market exposure risk management. The
Fund may lend its portfolio securities to qualified institutional investors. The
Fund also may invest in restricted, private placement and other illiquid
securities. In addition, the Fund may invest in securities issued by other
investment companies, consistent with the Fund's investment objective and
policies.

 

NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND: In seeking to achieve its investment
objective, the Fund will invest in selected equity securities that are included
in the Standard & Poor's SmallCap 600 Index (the "S&P 600 Index")2. The S&P 600
Index is a capitalization weighted index consisting of 600 domestic stocks which
capture the economic and industry characteristics of small stock performance.
Most of these stocks are listed on either the New York, American or NASDAQ stock
exchanges.

 

(1) "Standard & Poor's 500" is a registered service mark of Standard & Poor's
    Corporation ("S&P").

 

(2) "Standard & Poor's 600" is a registered service mark of S&P.

 
                                                                               5
 
<PAGE>

Unlike traditional index funds, the Fund has a "managed" aspect. The Adviser
believes that a managed equity index portfolio can provide investors with
positive incremental performance relative to the S&P 600 Index while minimizing
the downside risk of underperforming the Index over time.

 

From the initial S&P 600 Index stock universe the Adviser ranks the
attractiveness of each security according to a multi-factor valuation model.
Both value and momentum factors are considered in the ranking process. Value
factors such as book value, earnings yield and cash flow measure a stock's
intrinsic worth versus its market price, while momentum characteristics such as
price momentum, earnings growth and earnings acceleration measure a stock
relative to others in the same industry. Each stock is assigned a ranking from 1
to 10 (best to worst). The Adviser then screens out the lower rated stocks
resulting in a portfolio of approximately 450-500 holdings that capture the
investment characteristics of the Index.

 
In addition, when consistent with the Fund's investment objective, the Fund will
employ various techniques to manage capital gain distributions. These techniques
include utilizing a share identification methodology whereby the Fund will
specifically identify each lot of shares of portfolio securities that it holds,
which will allow the Fund to sell first those specific shares with the highest
tax basis in order to reduce the amount of recognized capital gains as compared
with a sale of identical portfolio securities, if any, with a lower tax basis.
The Fund will sell first those shares with the highest tax basis only when it is
in the best interest of the Fund to do so, and reserves the right to sell other
shares when appropriate. In addition, the Fund may, at times, sell portfolio
securities in order to realize capital losses. Such capital losses would be used
to offset realized capital gains thereby reducing capital gain distributions.
Additionally, the Adviser will, consistent with the multi-factor valuation model
discussed above, employ a low portfolio turnover strategy designed to defer the
realization of capital gains.
 

Under normal conditions, substantially all of the Fund's assets, and, in any
event at least 65% of its total assets, will be invested in common stocks which
are included in the S&P 600 Index. The Fund is expected, however, to maintain a
position in high-quality short-term debt securities and money market instruments
to meet redemption requests. If the Adviser believes that market conditions
warrant a temporary defensive posture, the Fund may invest without limitation in
high-quality short-term debt securities and money market instruments. These
securities and money market instruments may include domestic and foreign
commercial paper, certificates of deposit, bankers' acceptances and time
deposits, U.S. Government Obligations and repurchase agreements.

 

The Fund also may invest in certain specified derivative securities including:
exchange-traded options; over-the-counter options executed with primary dealers,
including long calls and puts and covered calls to enhance return; and U.S.
exchange-traded financial futures approved by the CFTC and options thereon for
market exposure risk management. The Fund may lend its portfolio securities to
qualified institutional investors. The Fund also may invest in restricted,
private placement and other illiquid securities. In addition, the Fund may
invest in securities issued by other investment companies, consistent with the
Fund's investment objective and policies.

 

ABOUT THE INDEXES: The S&P 500 Index is composed of 500 common stocks, which are
chosen by S&P on a statistical basis to be included in the Index. The S&P
SmallCap 600 Index is composed of 600 domestic stocks, which are chosen by S&P
based on, among other things, market size, liquidity and industry group
representation. The S&P SmallCap 600 Index is designed to be a benchmark of
small capitalization stock performance.

 

The inclusion of a stock in the S&P 500 Index or the SmallCap 600 Index in no
way implies that S&P believes the stock to be an attractive investment. The
Indexes are determined, composed and calculated by S&P without regard to the
Funds. S&P is neither a sponsor of, nor in any way affiliated with, the Funds,
and S&P makes no representation or warranty, expressed or implied, on the
advisability of investing in the Funds or as to the ability of the Indexes to
track general stock market performance. S&P disclaims all warranties of
merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose or use with respect to the
Indexes or any data included therein.

 

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER: Generally, the Funds will purchase portfolio securities for
capital appreciation or investment income, or both, and not for short-term
trading profits. While it is not possible to predict exactly annual portfolio
turnover rates, it is expected that under normal market conditions, the annual
portfolio turnover rate for each Fund will not exceed 25%.

 

RISK CONSIDERATIONS: Although the Adviser will seek to achieve the investment
objective of each Fund, there is no assurance that it will be able to do so. No
single fund should be considered, by itself, to provide a complete investment
program for any investor. Investments in a Fund are not insured against loss of
principal.

 

Investments by a Fund in common stocks and other equity securities are subject
to stock market risk. The value of the stocks that the Funds hold, like the
broader stock market, may decline over short or even extended periods.

 

Certain of the Funds' permissible investments may constitute derivative
securities, which are securities whose value is derived, at least in part, from
an underlying index or reference rate. There are certain types of derivative
securities that can, under certain circumstances, signifi-

6

<PAGE>

cantly increase a purchaser's exposure to market or other risks. The Adviser,
however, only purchases derivative securities in circumstances where it believes
such purchases are consistent with a Fund's investment objective and do not
unduly increase the Fund's exposure to market or other risks. For additional
risk information regarding the Funds' investments in particular instruments, see
"Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities."

 

The techniques employed by the Adviser to seek to manage capital gain
distributions will generally only have the effect of deferring the realization
of capital gains. For example, to the extent that the capital gains recognized
on a sale of portfolio securities arise from the sale of specifically-identified
securities with higher tax bases, subsequent sales of the same portfolio
securities will be calculated by reference to the lower tax basis securities
that remain in the portfolio. Under this scenario, an investor who purchases
shares of a Fund after the first sale could receive capital gain distributions
that are higher than the distributions that would have been received if this
methodology had not been used. Therefore, certain investors actually could be
disadvantaged by the techniques employed by the Fund to seek to manage capital
gain distributions, depending on the timing of their purchase of Fund shares.
Even if there are no subsequent sales, upon a redemption or exchange of Fund
shares an investor will have to recognize gain to the extent that the net asset
value of Fund shares at such time exceeds such investor's tax basis in his or
her Fund shares.

 

The various techniques employed by the Funds to manage capital gain
distributions may result in the accumulation of substantial unrealized gains in
the Funds' portfolios. Moreover, the realization of capital gains is not
entirely within a Fund's control because it is at least partly dependent on
shareholder purchase and redemption activity. Capital gain distributions may
vary considerably from year-to-year.

 

INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS: Each Fund is subject to a number of investment
limitations. The following investment limitations are matters of fundamental
policy and may not be changed without the affirmative vote of the holders of a
majority of each Fund's outstanding shares. Other investment limitations that
cannot be changed without such a vote of shareholders are described in the SAI.

 

Each Fund may not:

 
1. Purchase any securities which would cause 25% or more of the value of the
Fund's total assets at the time of such purchase to be invested in the
securities of one or more issuers conducting their principal activities in the
same industry (for purposes of this limitation, U.S. Government securities are
not considered members of any industry.)
 

2. Make loans, except that a Fund may purchase and hold debt instruments
(whether such instruments are part of a public offering or privately placed),
may enter into repurchase agreements and may lend portfolio securities in
accordance with its investment policies.

 

3. Purchase securities of any one issuer (other than securities issued or
guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities) if,
immediately after such purchase, more than 5% of the value of such Fund's total
assets would be invested in the securities of such issuer, except that up to 25%
of the value of the Fund's total assets may be invested without regard to these
limitations and with respect to 75% of such Fund's assets, the Fund will not
hold more than 10% of the voting securities of any issuer.

 

The investment objective and policies of each Fund, unless otherwise specified,
may be changed without a vote of the Fund's shareholders. If the investment
objective or policies of a Fund change, shareholders should consider whether the
Fund remains an appropriate investment in light of their current position and
needs.

 
   How Performance Is Shown
 

From time to time the Funds may advertise the total return and yield on a class
of shares. TOTAL RETURN AND YIELD FIGURES ARE BASED ON HISTORICAL DATA AND ARE
NOT INTENDED TO INDICATE FUTURE PERFORMANCE. The "total return" of a class of
shares of a Fund may be calculated on an average annual total return basis or an
aggregate total return basis. Average annual total return refers to the average
annual compounded rates of return over one-, five-, and ten-year periods or the
life of a Fund (as stated in the advertisement) that would equate an initial
amount invested at the beginning of a stated period to the ending redeemable
value of the investment, assuming the reinvestment of all dividend and capital
gain distributions. Aggregate total return reflects the total percentage change
in the value of the investment over the measuring period again assuming the
reinvestment of all dividends and capital gain distributions. Total return may
also be presented for other periods.



"Yield" is calculated by dividing the annualized net investment income per share
during a recent 30-day (or one month) period of a class of shares of a Fund by
the maximum public offering price per share on the last day of that period.

 

Set forth below is certain performance data for the Enhanced Equity Index Common
Trust Fund and Enhanced Small Cap Equity Index Common Trust Fund (the "CTFs"),
each of which is currently managed on

 
                                                                               7
 
<PAGE>

behalf of NationsBank by TradeStreet. (Prior to the formation of TradeStreet in
1995, the CTFs were managed solely by NationsBank.) The performance data for the
CTFs is deemed relevant because the Enhanced Equity Index and Enhanced Small Cap
Equity Index Common Trust Funds have investment objectives and policies that are
substantially similar to those of Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed
SmallCap Index Fund, respectively. Moreover, the portfolio manager of
TradeStreet (who currently manages the CTFs and the Funds) employs the same
quantitative investment process for the Funds that has, and continues to be,
utilized for the CTFs. THIS PERFORMANCE DATA REPRESENTS PAST PERFORMANCE OF THE
CTFS AND IS NOT NECESSARILY INDICATIVE OF THE FUTURE PERFORMANCE OF THE CTFS OR
THE FUNDS.

 

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS FOR THE PERIODS
INDICATED THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 1996*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                              Since
                                                            Inception
                   One Year     Three Year    Five Year    (12/31/88)**
<S>              <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
Enhanced Equity
  Index Common
  Trust Fund        19.78%        16.91%        14.90%        16.03%
S&P 500 Index       20.33%        17.40%        15.21%        15.79%
Lipper Equity
  Index Funds
  Average+          19.77%        16.90%        14.70%        15.18%
</TABLE>

 

ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                               Enhanced                    Lipper Equity
                             Equity Index                      Index
                             Common Trust        S&P           Funds
Year                             Fund         500 Index      Average+
<S>                          <C>            <C>            <C> 
1989                             34.12%         31.55%         30.58%
1990                             -1.52%         -3.15%         -3.57%
1991                             31.72%         30.56%         29.65%
1992                              5.52%          7.64%          7.12%
1993                             10.47%          9.99%          9.52%
1994                              0.69%          1.31%          0.90%
1995                             37.66%         37.45%         36.82%
</TABLE>

 

TOTAL RETURNS FOR THE PERIODS INDICATED
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 1996*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                            Since
                                             Year-To-     Inception
                             Three Month       Date       (10/1/95)
 <S>                          <C>           <C>           <C>
Enhanced Small Cap Equity
  Index Common Trust Fund       4.35%         16.33%        17.25%
S&P 600 Index                   3.21%         14.79%        15.31%
</TABLE>

 

 * The total returns above reflect the deduction of 0.50% of fees and expenses
   per annum. The CTFs are not subject to certain investment limitations,
   diversification requirements, and other restrictions imposed by the 1940 Act
   and the Internal Revenue Code, which if applicable, may have adversely
   affected the performance results of the CTFs.

 

** Prior to 12/31/88 the Enhanced Equity Index Common Trust Fund was managed
   with a different objective and policies and therefore performance prior
   thereto is not included in the prior performance calculations.

 

 + The Lipper Equity Index Funds Average represents the average performance of
   mutual funds with similar objectives monitored by Lipper Analytical Services,
   Inc. during the periods shown.

 

Investment performance, which will vary, is based on many factors, including
market conditions, the composition of a Fund's portfolio and the Fund's
operating expenses. Investment performance also often reflects the risks
associated with such Fund's investment objective and policies. These factors
should be considered when comparing a Fund's investment results to those of
other mutual funds and other investment vehicles. Since yields fluctuate, yield
data cannot necessarily be used to compare an investment in a Fund with bank
deposits, savings accounts, and similar investment alternatives which often
provide an agreed-upon or guaranteed fixed yield for a stated period of time.

 

In addition to Primary A Shares, the Funds offer Primary B, Investor A and
Investor C Shares. Each class of shares may bear different sales charges,
shareholder servicing fees and other expenses, which may cause the performance
of a class to differ from the performance of the other classes. Performance
quotations will be computed separately for each class of a Fund's shares. Any
fees charged by an institution directly to its customers' accounts in connection
with investments in the Funds will not be included in calculations of total
return or yield. Each Fund's annual report contains additional performance
information and is available upon request without charge from the Funds'
distributor or your Institution, as defined below.

 

   How The Funds Are Managed

 
The business and affairs of Nations Fund Trust are managed under the direction
of its Board of Trustees. Nations Fund Trust's SAI contains the names of and
general background information concerning each Trustee of Nations Fund Trust.
 
Nations Fund and the Adviser have adopted codes of ethics which contain policies
on personal securities transactions by "access persons," including portfolio
managers and investment analysts. These policies substantially comply in all
material respects with the recommendations set forth in the May 9, 1994 Report
of the Advisory
 
8
 
<PAGE>
Group on Personal Investing of the Investment Company Institute.
 

INVESTMENT ADVISER: NationsBanc Advisors, Inc. serves as investment adviser to
the Funds. NBAI is a wholly owned subsidiary of NationsBank, which in turn is a
wholly owned banking subsidiary of NationsBank Corporation, a bank holding
company organized as a North Carolina corporation. NBAI has its principal
offices at One NationsBank Plaza, Charlotte, North Carolina 28255.

 

TradeStreet Investment Associates, Inc., with principal offices at One
NationsBank Plaza, Charlotte, North Carolina 28255, serves as investment
sub-adviser to the Funds. TradeStreet is a wholly owned subsidiary of
NationsBank. TradeStreet provides investment management services to individuals,
corporations and institutions.

 

Subject to the general supervision of Nations Fund Trust's Board of Trustees,
and in accordance with each Fund's investment policies, the Adviser formulates
guidelines and lists of approved investments for each Fund, makes decisions with
respect to and places orders for each Fund's purchases and sales of portfolio
securities and maintains records relating to such purchases and sales. The
Adviser is authorized to allocate purchase and sale orders for portfolio
securities to certain financial institutions, including, in the case of agency
transactions, financial institutions which are affiliated with the Adviser or
which have sold shares in such Funds, if the Adviser believes that the quality
of the transaction and the commission are comparable to what they would be with
other qualified brokerage firms. From time to time, to the extent consistent
with its investment objective, policies and restrictions, each Fund may invest
in securities of companies with which NationsBank has a lending relationship.
For the services provided and expenses assumed pursuant to an Investment
Advisory Agreement, NBAI is entitled to receive advisory fees, computed daily
and paid monthly, at the annual rate of 0.50% of the average daily net assets of
each Fund.

 

From time to time, NBAI (and/or TradeStreet) may waive or reimburse (either
voluntarily or pursuant to applicable state limitations) advisory fees and/or
expenses payable by a Fund.

 

For the services provided and the expenses assumed pursuant to a Sub-Advisory
Agreement, NBAI will pay TradeStreet sub-advisory fees, computed daily and paid
monthly, at the annual rate of 0.10% of the average daily net assets of each
Fund.

 
Greg W. Golden is a Structured Products Manager, Equity Management for
TradeStreet and is Portfolio Manager for Nations Equity Index Fund, Nations
Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund. He has been
Portfolio Manager for Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund since its inception.
Prior to assuming his position with TradeStreet in 1996, he was Vice President
and Structured Products Manager for the Investment Management Group at
NationsBank. He has worked in the investment community since 1990. His past
experience includes portfolio management, derivatives management and
quantitative analysis for the Investment Management Group at NationsBank and
Sovran Bank of Tennessee. Mr. Golden received a B.B.A. in Finance from Belmont
University. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst candidate and a member of the
Association for Investment Management and Research as well as the North Carolina
Society of Financial Analysts, Inc.
 
Morrison & Foerster LLP, counsel to Nations Fund and special counsel to
NationsBank, has advised Nations Fund and NationsBank that NationsBank and its
affiliates may perform the services contemplated by the Investment Advisory
Agreement and this Prospectus without violation of the Glass-Steagall Act. Such
counsel has pointed out, however, that there are no controlling judicial or
administrative interpretations or decisions and that future judicial or
administrative interpretations of, or decisions relating to, present federal or
state statutes, including the Glass-Steagall Act, and regulations relating to
the permissible activities of banks and their subsidiaries or affiliates, as
well as future changes in such federal or state statutes, regulations and
judicial or administrative decisions or interpretations, could prevent such
entities from continuing to perform, in whole or in part, such services. If any
such entity were prohibited from performing any of such services, it is expected
that new agreements would be proposed or entered into with another entity or
entities qualified to perform such services.
 

OTHER SERVICE PROVIDERS: Stephens Inc. ("Stephens"), with principal offices at
111 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201, serves as the administrator of
Nations Fund pursuant to an Administration Agreement. Pursuant to the terms of
the Administration Agreement, Stephens provides various administrative and
corporate secretarial services to the Funds, including providing general
oversight of other service providers, office space, utilities and various legal
and administrative services in connection with the satisfaction of various
regulatory requirements applicable to the Funds.

 

First Data Investor Services Group, Inc. ("First Data"), formerly The
Shareholder Services Group, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of First Data
Corporation, with principal offices at One Exchange Place, Boston, Massachusetts
02109, serves as the co-administrator of Nations Fund pursuant to a
Co-Administration Agreement. Under the Co-Administration Agreement, First Data
provides various administrative and accounting services to the Funds including
performing the calculations necessary to determine net asset value per share and
dividends of each class of shares of the Funds, preparing tax

 
                                                                               9
 
<PAGE>

returns and financial statements and maintaining the portfolio records and
certain of the general accounting records for the Funds.

 

For the services rendered pursuant to the Administration and Co-Administration
Agreements, Stephens and First Data are entitled to receive a combined fee at an
annual rate of up to 0.10% of each Fund's average daily net assets.

 

NationsBank serves as sub-administrator for Nations Fund pursuant to a
Sub-Administration Agreement. Pursuant to the terms of the Sub-Administration
Agreement, NationsBank assists Stephens in supervising, coordinating and
monitoring various aspects of the Funds' administrative operations. For
providing such services, NationsBank shall be entitled to receive a monthly fee
from Stephens based on an annual rate of 0.01% of the Funds' average daily net
assets.

 

Shares of the Funds are sold on a continuous basis by Stephens, as the Funds'
sponsor and distributor. Stephens is a registered broker/dealer with principal
offices at 111 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201. Nations Fund has
entered into distribution agreements with Stephens which provide that Stephens
has the exclusive right to distribute shares of the Funds. Stephens may pay
service fees or commissions to Institutions which assist customers in purchasing
Primary A Shares of the Funds.

 

First Data serves as the Transfer Agent for the Funds' Primary A Shares.
NationsBank of Texas, N.A. ("NationsBank of Texas" or the "Custodian") serves as
custodian for the assets of the Funds. NationsBank of Texas, which also serves
as the sub-transfer agent for the Funds' Primary A Shares, is located at 1401
Elm Street, Dallas, Texas 75202, and is a wholly owned subsidiary of NationsBank
Corporation. In return for providing custodial services, NationsBank of Texas is
entitled to receive, in addition to out-of-pocket expenses, fees payable monthly
(i) at the rate of 1.25% of 1% of the average daily net assets of each Fund,
(ii) $10.00 per repurchase collateral transaction by such Fund, and (iii) $15.00
per purchase, sale and maturity transaction involving such Fund. In return for
providing sub-transfer agency services for the Primary A Shares of Nations Fund,
NationsBank of Texas is entitled to receive an annual fee from First Data of
$251,000.

 
Price Waterhouse LLP serves as independent accountant to Nations Fund. Its
address is 160 Federal Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110.
 

EXPENSES: The accrued expenses of each Fund are deducted from the Fund's total
accrued income before dividends are declared. These expenses include, but are
not limited to: fees paid to the Adviser, NationsBank, Stephens and First Data;
taxes; interest; Trustees' fees; federal and state securities registration and
qualification fees; brokerage fees and commissions; costs of preparing and
printing prospectuses for regulatory purposes and for distribution to existing
shareholders; charges of the Custodian and Transfer Agent; certain insurance
premiums; outside auditing and legal expenses; costs of shareholder reports and
shareholder meetings; other expenses which are not expressly assumed by the
Adviser, NationsBank, Stephens or First Data under their respective agreements
with Nations Fund; and any extraordinary expenses. Any general expenses of
Nations Fund Trust that are not readily identifiable as belonging to a
particular investment portfolio are allocated among all portfolios in the
proportion that the assets of a portfolio bears to the assets of Nations Fund
Trust or in such other manner as the Board of Trustees determines is fair and
equitable.

 
   Organization And History
 

The Funds are members of the Nations Fund Family, which consists of Nations Fund
Trust, Nations Fund, Inc., Nations Fund Portfolios, Inc. and Nations
Institutional Reserves. The Nations Fund Family currently consists of more than
43 distinct investment portfolios and total assets in excess of $18 billion.

 

NATIONS FUND TRUST: Nations Fund Trust was organized as a Massachusetts business
trust on May 6, 1985. Nations Fund Trust's fiscal year end is March 31; prior to
1996, Nations Fund Trust's fiscal year end was November 30. The Funds currently
offer four classes of shares -- Primary A Shares, Primary B Shares, Investor A
Shares and Investor C Shares. This Prospectus relates only to the Primary A
Shares of Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund of
Nations Fund Trust. To obtain additional information regarding the Funds' other
classes of shares which may be available to you, contact your Institution (as
defined below) or Nations Fund at 1-800-626-2275.


Each share of Nations Fund Trust is without par value, represents an equal
proportionate interest in the related fund with other shares of the same class,
and is entitled to such dividends and distributions out of the income earned on
the assets belonging to such fund as are declared in the discretion of Nations
Fund Trust's Board of Trustees. Nations Fund Trust's Declaration of Trust
authorizes the Board of Trustees to classify or reclassify any class of shares
into one or more series of shares.
 
Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each full share held and a
proportionate fractional vote for each fractional share held. Shareholders of
each fund of Nations
 
10
 
<PAGE>
Fund Trust will vote in the aggregate and not by fund, and shareholders of each
fund will vote in the aggregate and not by class except as otherwise expressly
required by law or when the Board of Trustees determines that the matter to be
voted on affects only the interests of shareholders of a particular fund or
class. See the related SAI for examples of when the Investment Company Act of
1940 (the "1940 Act") requires voting by fund.


As of October 15, 1996, NationsBank and its affiliates possessed or shared power
to dispose or vote with respect to more than 25% of the outstanding shares of
certain classes of shares of Nations Fund Trust and therefore could be
considered to be a controlling person of these classes and series of Nations
Fund Trust for purposes of the 1940 Act. For more detailed information
concerning the percentage of each class or series of shares over which
NationsBank and its affiliates possessed or shared power to dispose or vote as
of a certain date, see Nations Fund Trust's SAI.

 
Nations Fund Trust does not presently intend to hold annual meetings except as
required by the 1940 Act. Shareholders will have the right to remove Trustees.
Nations Fund Trust's Code of Regulations provides that special meetings of
shareholders shall be called at the written request of the shareholders entitled
to vote at least 10% of the outstanding shares of Nations Fund Trust entitled to
be voted at such meeting.
 
About Your Investment
 
   How To Buy Shares


There is a minimum initial investment for each record holder of $500,000 for
Nations Managed Index Fund and $500,000 for Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund;
there are no minimum subsequent investments.

 

Primary A Shares may be sold to NationsBank and its affiliates acting on behalf
of bona fide trust customers. Primary A Shares also may be sold to employee
benefit plans, charitable foundations, endowments and to other funds in the
Nations Fund Family.

 

Primary A Shares are sold at net asset value without the imposition of a sales
charge. Financial institutions ("Institutions") acting on behalf of their
customers ("Customers") may establish certain procedures for processing
Customers' purchase orders and may charge their Customers for services provided
to them in connection with their investments.

 

Purchases may be effected on days on which the New York Stock Exchange (the
"Exchange") is open for business (a "NYSE Business Day"). Unless otherwise
specified, the term "Business Day" in this Prospectus refers to a NYSE Business
Day.

 

Nations Fund reserves the right to reject any purchase order. The issuance of
Primary A Shares is recorded on the books of the Funds, and share certificates
are not issued. It is the responsibility of Institutions, when applicable, to
record beneficial ownership of Primary A Shares and to reflect such ownership in
the account statements provided to their Customers.

 

EFFECTIVE TIME OF PURCHASES: Purchase orders for Primary A Shares of the Funds
which are received by Stephens or by the Transfer Agent before the close of
regular trading hours on the Exchange (currently 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) on any
Business Day are priced according to the net asset value determined on that day
but are not executed until 4:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the Business Day on which
immediately available funds in payment of the purchase price are received by the
Funds' Custodian. Such payment must be received no later than 4:00 p.m., Eastern
time, by the third Business Day following receipt of the order. If funds are not
received by such date, the order will not be accepted and notice thereof will be
given to the Institution or investor placing the order. Payment for orders which
are not received or accepted will be returned after prompt inquiry to the
sending Institution or investor. Primary A Shares are purchased at the net asset
value per share next determined after receipt of the order by Stephens or by the
Transfer Agent.

 
Institutions are responsible for transmitting orders for purchases of Primary A
Shares by their Customers, and for delivering required funds, on a timely basis.
It is Stephens' responsibility to transmit orders it receives to Nations Fund.
 
                                                                              11
 
<PAGE>
   How To Redeem Shares
 

Nations Fund may redeem a shareholder's Primary A Shares if the balance in such
shareholder's account with a Fund drops below $500 as a result of redemptions,
and the shareholder does not increase the balance to at least
$500 on 60 days' written notice. If a Customer has agreed with a particular
Institution to maintain a minimum balance in his or her account at the
Institution, and the balance in such Institution account falls below that
minimum, the Customer may be obliged to redeem all or a part of his or her
Primary A Shares in such Fund to the extent necessary to maintain the required
minimum balance in such Institution account. Nations Fund also may redeem shares
involuntarily or make payment for redemption in readily marketable securities or
other property under certain circumstances in accordance with the 1940 Act.

 
Institutions are responsible for transmitting redemption orders to Stephens or
to the Transfer Agent and for crediting their Customers' accounts with the
redemption proceeds on a timely basis. It is the responsibility of Stephens to
transmit orders it receives to Nations Fund. No charge for wiring redemption
payments is imposed by Nations Fund, although Institutions may charge their
Customer accounts for these or other services provided in connection with the
redemption of Primary A Shares and may establish additional procedures.
Information concerning any charges or procedures is available from the
Institutions. Redemption orders are effected at the net asset value per share
next determined after acceptance of the order by Stephens or by the Transfer
Agent. Redemption proceeds are normally remitted in federal funds wired to the
redeeming Institution or investor within three Business Days following receipt
of the order.
 
   How To Exchange Shares
 

The exchange feature enables a shareholder of Primary A Shares of a Fund to
acquire Primary A Shares of another fund when that shareholder believes that a
shift between funds is an appropriate investment decision. An exchange of
Primary A Shares for Primary A Shares of another fund is made on the basis of
the next calculated net asset value per share of each fund after the exchange
order is received.

 

The Funds and each of the other funds of Nations Fund may limit the number of
times this exchange feature may be exercised by a shareholder within a specified
period of time. Also, the exchange feature may be terminated or revised at any
time by Nations Fund upon such notice as may be required by applicable
regulatory agencies (presently 60 days for termination or material revision),
provided that the exchange feature may be terminated or materially revised
without notice under certain unusual circumstances.

 
The current prospectus for each fund of Nations Fund describes its investment
objective and policies, and shareholders should obtain a copy and examine it
carefully before investing. Exchanges are subject to the minimum investment
requirement and any other conditions imposed by each fund. In the case of any
shareholder holding a share certificate or certificates, no exchanges may be
made until all applicable share certificates have been received by the Transfer
Agent and deposited in the shareholder's account. An exchange will be treated
for Federal income tax purposes the same as a redemption of shares, on which the
shareholder may realize a capital gain or loss. However, the ability to deduct
capital losses on an exchange may be limited in situations where there is an
exchange of shares within 90 days after the shares are purchased.
 
Nations Fund reserves the right to reject any exchange request. Only shares that
may legally be sold in the state of the investor's residence may be acquired in
an exchange. Only shares of a class that is accepting investments generally may
be acquired in an exchange.
 
If you have telephone exchange privileges, during periods of significant
economic or market change, telephone exchanges may be difficult to complete. In
such event, shares may be exchanged by mailing your request directly to the
entity through which the original shares were purchased. Investors should
consult their Institution or Stephens for further information regarding
exchanges.
 
Primary A Shares may be exchanged by directing a request directly to the
Institution, if any, through which the original Primary A Shares were purchased
or in other cases Stephens or the Transfer Agent. Investors should consult their
Institution, Stephens or the Transfer Agent for further information regarding
exchanges. Your exchange feature may be governed by your account agreement with
your Institution.
 
12
 
<PAGE>

   How The Funds Value Their Shares

 

The net asset value of a share of each class is calculated by dividing the total
value of its assets, less liabilities, by the number of shares in the class
outstanding. Shares of the Funds are valued as of the close of regular trading
on the Exchange (currently 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) on each NYSE Business Day.
Currently, the days on which the Exchange is closed (other than weekends) are:
New Year's Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day (observed),
Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day.

 
Portfolio securities for which market quotations are readily available are
valued at market value. Short-term investments that will mature in 60 days or
less are valued at amortized cost, which approximates market value. All other
securities are valued at their fair value following procedures approved by the
Trustees.
 
   How Dividends And Distributions Are Made;
   Tax Information
 

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Even though the Funds seek to manage taxable
distributions, the Funds may be expected to earn and distribute taxable income
and may also be expected to realize and distribute capital gains from time to
time. Dividends from net investment income are declared and paid each calendar
quarter by the Funds. The Funds' net realized capital gains (including net
short-term capital gains) are distributed at least annually.

 

Primary A Shares of the Funds are eligible to receive dividends when declared,
provided, however, that the purchase order for such shares is received at least
one day prior to the dividend declaration and such shares continue to be
eligible for dividends through and including the day before the redemption order
is executed.

 

The net asset value of Primary A Shares will be reduced by the amount of any
dividend or distribution. Dividends and distributions are paid in cash within
five Business Days of the end of the quarter to which the dividend relates.
Certain purchasing Institutions may provide for the reinvestment of dividends in
additional Primary A Shares of the same Fund. Dividends and distributions
payable to a shareholder are paid in cash within five Business Days after a
shareholder's complete redemption of his or her Primary A Shares in a Fund.

 

TAX INFORMATION: Each Fund intends to qualify as a separate "regulated
investment company" under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
"Code"). Such qualification relieves a Fund of liability for Federal income tax
to the extent its earnings are distributed in accordance with the Code.

 

Each Fund intends to distribute substantially all of its investment company
taxable income and net tax-exempt income each taxable year. Such distributions
by a Fund of its net investment income (including net foreign currency gains)
and the excess, if any, of its net short-term capital gain over its net
long-term capital loss will be taxable as ordinary income to shareholders who
are not currently exempt from Federal income tax, whether such income is
received in cash or reinvested in additional shares.

 

Corporate shareholders may be entitled to the dividends-received deduction for
distributions from a Fund's investment in the stock of domestic corporations to
the extent of the total qualifying dividends received by the Fund.

 

Substantially all of the net realized long-term capital gains of the Funds, if
any, will be distributed at least annually to the Funds' shareholders. The Funds
will generally have no tax liability with respect to such gains, and the
distributions will be taxable to such shareholders who are not currently exempt
from Federal income tax as long-term capital gains, regardless of how long the
shareholders have held such Funds' shares and whether such gains are received in
cash or reinvested in additional shares.

 
Each year, shareholders will be notified as to the amount and Federal tax status
of all dividends and capital gains paid during the prior year. Such dividends
and capital gains may also be subject to state and local taxes.
 

Dividends declared in October, November or December of any year payable to
shareholders of record on a specified date in such months will be deemed to have
been received by shareholders and paid by a Fund on December 31 of such year in
the event such dividends are actually paid during January of the following year.

 
Federal law requires Nations Fund to withhold 31% from any dividends (other than
exempt-interest dividends) paid by Nations Fund and/or redemptions (including
exchange redemptions) that occur in certain shareholder accounts if the
shareholder has not properly furnished a certified correct Taxpayer
Identification Number or has not certified that withholding does not apply. If
the Internal Revenue Service has notified Nations Fund that the Taxpayer
Identification Number listed on a shareholder account is incorrect according to
its records, or that the shareholder is subject to backup
 
                                                                              13
 
<PAGE>

withholding, a Fund is required by the Internal Revenue Service to withhold 31%
of any dividend (other than exempt-interest dividends) and/or redemption
(including exchange redemptions). Amounts withheld are applied to the
shareholder's Federal tax liability, and a refund may be obtained from the
Internal Revenue Service if withholding results in overpayment of taxes. Federal
law also requires each Fund to withhold 30% or the applicable tax treaty rate
from dividends paid to certain nonresident alien, non-U.S. partnership and
non-U.S. corporation shareholder accounts.

 

The foregoing discussion is based on tax laws and regulations which were in
effect as of the date of this Prospectus and summarizes only some of the
important tax considerations generally affecting the Funds and their
shareholders. It is not intended as a substitute for careful tax planning.
Accordingly, potential investors should consult their tax advisors with specific
reference to their own tax situations. Further tax information is contained in
the SAI.

 
   Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities
 

The following are summary descriptions of certain types of instruments in which
a Fund may invest. The "How Objectives Are Pursued" section of the Prospectus
identifies each Fund's permissible investments, and the SAI contains more
information concerning such investments.

 

BANK INSTRUMENTS: Bank instruments consist mainly of certificates of deposit,
time deposits and bankers' acceptances. The Funds will limit their investments
in bank obligations so they do not exceed 25% of each Fund's total assets at the
time of purchase.

 

BORROWINGS: When a Fund borrows money, the net asset value of a share may be
subject to greater fluctuation until the borrowing is paid off. The Funds may
borrow money from banks for temporary purposes in amounts of up to one-third of
their respective total assets, provided that borrowings in excess of 5% of the
value of the Fund's total assets must be repaid prior to the purchase of
portfolio securities. Under the requirements of the 1940 Act, the Funds are
required to maintain an asset coverage (including the proceeds of the
borrowings) of at least 300% of all borrowings.

 

COMMERCIAL INSTRUMENTS: Commercial instruments consist of short-term U.S.
dollar-denominated obligations issued by domestic corporations or foreign
corporations and foreign commercial banks. Investments by a Fund in commercial
paper will consist of issues rated in a manner consistent with such Fund's
investment policies and objective. In addition, a Fund may acquire unrated
commercial paper and corporate bonds that are determined by the Adviser at the
time of purchase to be of comparable quality to rated instruments that may be
acquired by a Fund. Commercial instruments include variable-rate master demand
notes, which are unsecured instruments that permit the indebtedness thereunder
to vary and provide for periodic adjustments in the interest rate, and variable-
and floating-rate instruments.

 

CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES, PREFERRED STOCK, AND WARRANTS: The Funds may invest in
debt securities convertible into or exchangeable for equity securities,
preferred stocks or warrants. Preferred stocks are securities that represent an
ownership interest in a corporation providing the owner with claims on a
company's earnings and assets before common stock owners, but after bond or
other debt security owners. Warrants are options to buy a stated number of
shares of common stock at a specified price any time during the life of the
warrants.

 

FUTURES, OPTIONS AND OTHER DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS: The Funds may attempt to
reduce the overall level of investment risk of particular securities and attempt
to protect a Fund against adverse market movements by investing in futures,
options and other derivative instruments. These include the purchase and writing
of options on securities (including index options), and investing in futures
contracts for the purchase or sale of instruments based on financial indices,
including interest rate indices or indices of U.S. Government, equity or fixed
income securities ("futures contracts"), options on futures contracts, forward
contracts and swaps and swap-related products such as interest rate swaps,
currency swaps, caps, collars and floors.

 

The use of futures, options, forward contracts and swaps exposes a Fund to
additional investment risks and transaction costs. If the Adviser incorrectly
analyzes market conditions or does not employ the appropriate strategy with
respect to these instruments, a Fund could be left in a less favorable position.
Additional risks inherent in the use of futures, options, forward contracts and
swaps include: imperfect correlation between the price of futures, options and
forward contracts and movements in the prices of the securities or currencies
being hedged; the possible absence of a liquid secondary market for any
particular instrument at any time; and the possible need to defer closing out
certain hedged positions to avoid adverse tax consequences. A Fund may not
purchase put and call options which are traded on a national stock exchange in
an amount exceeding 5% of its net assets. Further information on the use of
futures, options and other derivative instruments, and the associated risks, is
contained in the SAI.

 

ILLIQUID SECURITIES: Certain securities may be sold only pursuant to certain
legal restrictions, and may be difficult to sell. The Funds will not hold more
than 15% of the value of their respective net assets in securities that are
illiquid or such lower percentage as may be required by the states in which the
appropriate Fund sells its

 
14
 
<PAGE>

shares. Repurchase agreements, time deposits and guaranteed investment contracts
that do not provide for payment to a Fund within seven days after notice, and
illiquid restricted securities are subject to the limitation on illiquid
securities.

 

If otherwise consistent with its investment objective and policies, certain
Funds may purchase securities that are not registered under the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended (the "1933 Act") but which can be sold to "qualified
institutional buyers" in accordance with Rule 144A under the 1933 Act, or which
were issued under Section 4(2) of the 1933 Act. Any such security will not be
considered illiquid so long as it is determined by a Fund's Board of Trustees or
the Adviser, acting under guidelines approved and monitored by such Fund's
Board, after considering trading activity, availability of reliable price
information and other relevant information, that an adequate trading market
exists for that security. To the extent that, for a period of time, qualified
institutional or other buyers cease purchasing such restricted securities
pursuant to Rule 144A or otherwise, the level of illiquidity of a Fund holding
such securities may increase during such period.

 
MONEY MARKET INSTRUMENTS: The term "money market instruments" refers to
instruments with remaining maturities of one year or less. Money market
instruments may include, among other instruments, certain U.S. Treasury
obligations, U.S. Government obligations, bank instruments, commercial
instruments, repurchase agreements and municipal securities. Such instruments
are described in this Appendix A.
 

OTHER INVESTMENT COMPANIES: Each Fund may invest in securities issued by other
investment companies to the extent that such investments are consistent with the
Fund's investment objective and policies and permissible under the 1940 Act. As
a shareholder of another investment company, a Fund would bear, along with other
shareholders, its pro rata portion of the other investment company's expenses,
including advisory fees. These expenses would be in addition to the advisory and
other expenses that a Fund bears directly in connection with its own operations.

 

REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS: A repurchase agreement involves the purchase of a
security by a Fund and a simultaneous agreement (generally with a bank or
broker/dealer) to repurchase that security from the Fund at a specified price
and date or upon demand. This technique offers a method of earning income on
idle cash. A risk associated with repurchase agreements is the failure of the
seller to repurchase the securities as agreed, which may cause a Fund to suffer
a loss if the market value of such securities declines before they can be
liquidated on the open market. Repurchase agreements with a duration of more
than seven days are considered illiquid securities and are subject to the limit
stated above. A Fund may enter into repurchase agreements jointly with other
investment portfolios of Nations Fund.

 

SECURITIES LENDING: To increase return on portfolio securities, the Funds may
lend their portfolio securities to broker/dealers and other institutional
investors pursuant to agreements requiring that the loans be continuously
secured by collateral equal at all times in value to at least the market value
of the securities loaned. There is a risk of delay in receiving collateral or in
recovering the securities loaned or even a loss of rights in the collateral
should the borrower of the securities fail financially. However, loans are made
only to borrowers deemed by the Adviser to be credit worthy and when, in its
judgment, the income to be earned from the loan justifies the attendant risks.
The aggregate of all outstanding loans of a Fund may not exceed 30% of the value
of its total assets.

 
U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS: U.S. Government obligations consist of marketable
securities and instruments issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or any of
its agencies, authorities or instrumentalities. Direct obligations are issued by
the U.S. Treasury and include all U.S. Treasury instruments. U.S. Treasury
obligations differ only in their interest rates, maturities and time of
issuance. Obligations of U.S. Government agencies, authorities and
instrumentalities are issued by government-sponsored agencies and enterprises
acting under authority of Congress. Although obligations of federal agencies,
authorities and instrumentalities are not debts of the U.S. Treasury, some are
backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury, such as direct
pass-through certificates of the Government National Mortgage Association; some
are supported by the right of the issuer to borrow from the U.S. Government,
such as obligations of Federal Home Loan Banks, and some are backed only by the
credit of the issuer itself, such as obligations of the Federal National
Mortgage Association. No assurance can be given that the U.S. Government would
provide financial support to government-sponsored instrumentalities if it is not
obligated to do so by law. The market value of U.S. Government obligations may
fluctuate due to fluctuations in market interest rates. As a general matter, the
value of debt instruments, including U.S. Government obligations, declines when
market interest rates increase and rises when market interest rates decrease.
Certain types of U.S. Government obligations are subject to fluctuations in
yield or value due to their structure or contract terms.
 
WHEN-ISSUED, DELAYED DELIVERY AND FORWARD COMMITMENT SECURITIES: The purchase of
new issues of securities on a "when-issued," "delayed delivery" or "forward
commitment" basis occurs when the payment for and delivery of securities takes
place at a future date. Because actual payment for and delivery of such
securities generally take place 15 to 45 days after the purchase date,
purchasers of such securities bear the risk that interest rates on debt
securities at the time of delivery may be higher or lower than those contracted
for on the security purchased.
 
                                                                              15
 


<PAGE>
Prospectus
 

                                    PRIMARY B SHARES
                                    OCTOBER 15, 1996

 

This Prospectus describes NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
and NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND (the
"Funds") of Nations Fund Trust, an open-end
management investment company in the Nations Fund
Family ("Nations Fund" or "Nations Fund Family").
This Prospectus describes one class of shares of the
Funds -- Primary B Shares.

 

This Prospectus sets forth concisely the information
about the Funds that a prospective purchaser of
Primary B Shares should consider before investing.
Investors should read this Prospectus and retain it
for future reference. Additional information about
Nations Fund Trust is contained in a separate
Statement of Additional Information (the "SAI") that
has been filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the "SEC") and is available upon request
without charge by writing or calling Nations Fund at
its address or telephone number shown below. The
SAI, dated October 15, 1996, is incorporated by
reference in its entirety into this Prospectus.
NationsBanc Advisors, Inc. ("NBAI") is the
investment adviser to the Funds. TradeStreet
Investment Associates, Inc. ("TradeStreet") is
investment sub-adviser to the Funds. As used herein
the "Adviser" shall mean NBAI and/or TradeStreet as
the context may require.

 

SHARES OF NATIONS FUND ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OTHER
OBLIGATIONS OF, OR ISSUED, ENDORSED OR GUARANTEED
BY, NATIONSBANK, N.A. ("NATIONSBANK") OR ANY OF ITS
AFFILIATES. SUCH SHARES ARE NOT INSURED BY THE U.S.
GOVERNMENT, THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD OR ANY OTHER
GOVERNMENT AGENCY. AN INVESTMENT IN THE FUNDS
INVOLVES CERTAIN RISKS, INCLUDING POSSIBLE LOSS OF
PRINCIPAL.

 
NATIONSBANK AND CERTAIN OF ITS AFFILIATES PROVIDE
CERTAIN OTHER SERVICES TO NATIONS FUND, FOR WHICH
THEY ARE COMPENSATED. STEPHENS INC., WHICH IS NOT
AFFILIATED WITH NATIONSBANK, IS THE SPONSOR AND
ADMINISTRATOR AND SERVES AS THE DISTRIBUTOR FOR
NATIONS FUND.

THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR
DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION, NOR
HAS THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY
STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY
OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION
TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

                                                    Nations
                                                    Managed
                                                    Index Fund
                                                    Nations
                                                    Managed
                                                    SmallCap
                                                    Index Fund

 
                                                    For Fund information call:
                                                    1-800-626-2275
                                                    Nations Fund
                                                    c/o Stephens Inc.
                                                    One NationsBank Plaza
                                                    33rd Floor
                                                    Charlotte, NC 28255
                                                    (Nations Fund logo
                                                      appears here)
 
TR-96697-1096
 
<PAGE>
                            Table  Of  Contents


About The Funds


 
                            Prospectus Summary                                 3
 
                            Expenses Summary                                   4
 

                            Objectives                                         5

 

                            How The Objectives Are Pursued                     5

 
                            How Performance Is Shown                           7
 

                            How The Funds Are Managed                          8

 

                            Organization And History                          10


 
About Your
Investment

 
 

                            How To Buy Shares                                 11

 

                            How To Redeem Shares                              11

 

                            How To Exchange Shares                            12

 

                            Shareholder Administration Arrangements           12

 

                            How the Funds Value Their Shares                  13

 

                            How Dividends And Distributions Are Made; Tax
                            Information                                       13

 

                            Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities                14

 

                            NO PERSON HAS BEEN AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY
                            INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS NOT
                            CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS, OR IN THE FUNDS' SAI
                            INCORPORATED HEREIN BY REFERENCE, IN CONNECTION WITH
                            THE OFFERING MADE BY THIS PROSPECTUS AND, IF GIVEN
                            OR MADE, SUCH INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS MUST
                            NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED BY
                            NATIONS FUND OR ITS DISTRIBUTOR. THIS PROSPECTUS
                            DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFERING BY NATIONS FUND OR
                            BY THE DISTRIBUTOR IN ANY JURISDICTION IN WHICH SUCH
                            OFFERING MAY NOT LAWFULLY BE MADE.


2

<PAGE>
About The Funds
 
   Prospectus Summary
 
(Bullet) TYPE OF COMPANY: Open-end management investment company.
 

(Bullet) INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES:

 

         (Bullet) Nations Managed Index Fund's investment objective is to seek,
                  over the long-term, to provide a total return which (gross of
                  fees and expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard &
                  Poor's 500 Composite Stock Price Index.

 

         (Bullet) Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund's investment
                  objective is to seek, over the long-term, to provide
                  a total return which (gross of fees and expenses)
                  exceeds the total return of the Standard & Poor's
                  SmallCap 600 Index.

 

        (Bullet) When consistent with the Funds' objectives,
                 the Funds will employ various techniques to
                 manage capital gain distributions.

 

(Bullet) INVESTMENT ADVISER: NationsBanc Advisors, Inc. serves as the investment
         adviser to the Funds. NBAI provides investment advice to more than 43
         investment company portfolios in the Nations Fund Family. TradeStreet
         Investment Associates, Inc. provides sub-advisory services to the
         Funds. See "How The Funds Are Managed."

 

(Bullet) DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations
         Managed SmallCap Index Fund declare and pay dividends from net
         investment income each calendar quarter. Each Fund's net realized
         capital gains, including net short-term capital gains, are distributed
         at least annually.

 

(Bullet) RISK FACTORS: Although the Adviser seeks to achieve the investment
         objective of the Funds, there is no assurance that it will be able to
         do so. Investments in the Funds are not insured against loss of
         principal. Investments by the Funds in common stocks and other equity
         securities are subject to stock market risk, which is the risk that the
         value of the stocks the Funds hold may decline over short or even
         extended periods. Certain of the Funds' permissible investments may
         constitute derivative securities. Certain types of derivative
         securities can, under certain circumstances, significantly increase an
         investor's exposure to market or other risks. For a discussion of these
         and other factors, see "How Objectives Are Pursued -- Risk
         Considerations" and "Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities."

 

(Bullet) MINIMUM PURCHASE: The minimum initial investment per record holder is
         $1,000 for Nations Managed Index Fund and $1,000 for Nations Managed
         SmallCap Index Fund. See "How To Buy Shares."

 
                                                                               3
 
<PAGE>
   Expenses Summary
 

Expenses are one of several factors to consider when investing in the Funds. The
following tables summarize shareholder transaction and operating expenses for
Primary B Shares of the Funds. The Examples show the cumulative expenses
attributable to a hypothetical $1,000 investment in Primary B Shares of the
indicated Fund over specified periods.

 
PRIMARY B SHARES
 
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                           Nations
                                                                                                           Managed
                                                                                                            Index
                                                                                                             Fund
<S>                                                                                                     <C>
Sales Load Imposed on Purchases                                                                              None
Deferred Sales Load                                                                                          None
 

                                                                                                           Nations
                                                                                                           Managed
                                                                                                           SmallCap
                                                                                                            Index
                                                                                                             Fund
Sales Load Imposed on Purchases                                                                              None
Deferred Sales Load                                                                                          None
</TABLE>

 
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES
(as a percentage of average net assets)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                           Nations
                                                                                                           Managed
                                                                                                            Index
                                                                                                             Fund


<S>                                                                                                     <C>
Management Fees (After Fee Waivers)                                                                         0.30%
Other Expenses                                                                                              0.70%
Total Operating Expenses (After Fee Waivers)                                                                1.00%
 


                                                                                                           Nations
                                                                                                           Managed
                                                                                                           SmallCap
                                                                                                            Index
                                                                                                             Fund

Management Fees (After Fee Waivers)                                                                         0.30%
Other Expenses                                                                                              0.70%
Total Operating Expenses (After Fee Waivers)                                                                1.00%
</TABLE>

 

EXAMPLES:

 

You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment in Primary B Shares
of the Funds, assuming (1) a 5% annual return and (2) redemption at the end of
each time period.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                           Nations
                                                                                                           Managed
                                                                                                            Index
                                                                                                             Fund
 
<S>                                                                                                     <C>
1 Year                                                                                                       $10
3 Years                                                                                                      $32
 

                                                                                                           Nations
                                                                                                           Managed
                                                                                                           SmallCap
                                                                                                            Index
                                                                                                             Fund
1 Year                                                                                                       $10
3 Years                                                                                                      $32
</TABLE>

 

The purpose of the foregoing tables is to assist an investor in understanding
the various shareholder transaction and operating expenses that an investor in
Primary B Shares will bear either directly or indirectly. The "Other Expenses"
figures in the above tables are based on estimates for the fiscal year and have
been restated as necessary to reflect anticipated fee waivers. There is no
assurance that any fee waivers and reimbursements will continue beyond the
current fiscal year. If fee waivers and/or reimbursements are discontinued, the
amounts contained in the "Examples" above may increase. For a more complete
description of the Funds' operating expenses, see "How The Funds Are Managed."
For a more complete description of the Shareholder Servicing Fees payable by the
Funds, see "Shareholder Administration Arrangements."

 

Absent fee waivers, "Management Fees" and "Total Operating Expenses" would be
 .50% and 1.20%, respectively, for both Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations
Managed SmallCap Index Fund.

 
THE FOREGOING SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED TO BE AN ACTUAL REPRESENTATION OF PAST OR
FUTURE PERFORMANCE. ACTUAL EXPENSES AND RATES OF RETURN MAY BE GREATER OR LESS
THAN THOSE SHOWN.
 
4

<PAGE>

   Objectives

 

NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND: Nations Managed Index Fund's investment objective is
to seek, over the long-term, to provide a total return which (gross of fees and
expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard & Poor's 500 Composite Stock
Price Index.

 

NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND: Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund's
investment objective is to seek, over the long-term, to provide a total return
which (gross of fees and expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard &
Poor's SmallCap 600 Index.

 

   How The Objectives Are Pursued

 

NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND: In seeking to achieve its investment objective, the
Fund will invest in selected equity securities that are included in the Standard
& Poor's 500 Composite Stock Price Index (the "S&P 500 Index")1. The S&P 500
Index is a value weighted index consisting of 500 common stocks chosen for
market size, liquidity and industry group representation.

 

Unlike traditional index funds, the Fund has a "managed" aspect. The Adviser
believes that a managed equity index portfolio can provide investors with
positive incremental performance relative to the S&P 500 Index while minimizing
the downside risk of underperforming the Index over time.

 

The initial stock universe considered by the Adviser is the S&P 500 Index. The
Adviser ranks the attractiveness of each security according to a multi-factor
valuation model. Both value and momentum factors are considered in the ranking
process. Value factors such as book value, earnings yield and cash flow measure
a stock's intrinsic worth versus its market price, while momentum
characteristics such as price momentum, earnings growth and earnings
acceleration measure a stock relative to others in the same industry. Each stock
is assigned a ranking from 1 to 10 (best to worst). The Adviser then screens out
the lower rated stocks resulting in a portfolio of 350 to 400 holdings that
capture the investment characteristics of the Index.

 

In addition, when consistent with the Fund's investment objective, the Fund will
employ various techniques to manage capital gain distributions. These techniques
include utilizing a share identification methodology whereby the Fund will
specifically identify each lot of shares of portfolio securities that it holds,
which will allow the Fund to sell first those specific shares with the highest
tax basis in order to reduce the amount of recognized capital gains as compared
with a sale of identical portfolio securities, if any, with a lower tax basis.
The Fund will sell first those shares with the highest tax basis only when it is
in the best interest of the Fund to do so, and reserves the right to sell other
shares when appropriate. In addition, the Fund may, at times, sell portfolio
securities in order to realize capital losses. Such capital losses would be used
to offset realized capital gains thereby reducing capital gain distributions.
Additionally, the Adviser will, consistent with the multi-factor valuation model
discussed above, employ a low portfolio turnover strategy designed to defer the
realization of capital gains.

 

Under normal conditions, the Adviser will attempt to invest as much of the
Fund's assets as is practical and, in any event the Fund will invest at least
65% of its total assets, in common stocks which are included in the S&P 500
Index. The Fund is expected, however, to maintain a position in high-quality
short-term debt securities and money market instruments to meet redemption
requests. If the Adviser believes that market conditions warrant a temporary
defensive posture, the Fund may invest without limitation in high-quality
short-term debt securities and money market instruments. These securities and
money market instruments may include domestic and foreign commercial paper,
certificates of deposit, bankers' acceptances and time deposits, U.S. Government
obligations ("U.S. Government Obligations") and repurchase agreements.

 

The Fund also may invest in certain specified derivative securities including:
exchange-traded options; over-the-counter options executed with primary dealers,
including long calls and puts and covered calls to enhance return; and U.S.
exchange-traded financial futures approved by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission ("CFTC") and options thereon for market exposure risk management. The
Fund may lend its portfolio securities to qualified institutional investors. The
Fund also may invest in restricted, private placement and other illiquid
securities. In addition, the Fund may invest in securities issued by other
investment companies, consistent with the Fund's investment objective and
policies.

 

NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND: In seeking to achieve its investment
objective, the Fund will invest in selected equity securities that are included
in the Standard & Poor's SmallCap 600 Index (the "S&P 600 Index")2. The S&P 600
Index is a capitalization weighted index consisting of 600 domestic stocks which
capture the economic and industry characteristics of small stock performance.
Most of these stocks are listed on either the New York, American or NASDAQ stock
exchanges.

 

(1) "Standard & Poor's 500" is a registered service mark of Standard & Poor's
    Corporation ("S&P").

 

(2) "Standard & Poor's 600" is a registered service mark of S&P.

 
                                                                               5
 
<PAGE>

Unlike traditional index funds, the Fund has a "managed" aspect. The Adviser
believes that a managed equity index portfolio can provide investors with
positive incremental performance relative to the S&P 600 Index while minimizing
the downside risk of underperforming the Index over time.

 

From the initial S&P 600 Index stock universe the Adviser ranks the
attractiveness of each security according to a multi-factor valuation model.
Both value and momentum factors are considered in the ranking process. Value
factors such as book value, earnings yield and cash flow measure a stock's
intrinsic worth versus its market price, while momentum characteristics such as
price momentum, earnings growth and earnings acceleration measure a stock
relative to others in the same industry. Each stock is assigned a ranking from 1
to 10 (best to worst). The Adviser then screens out the lower rated stocks
resulting in a portfolio of approximately 450-500 holdings that capture the
investment characteristics of the Index.

 
In addition, when consistent with the Fund's investment objective, the Fund will
employ various techniques to manage capital gain distributions. These techniques
include utilizing a share identification methodology whereby the Fund will
specifically identify each lot of shares of portfolio securities that it holds,
which will allow the Fund to sell first those specific shares with the highest
tax basis in order to reduce the amount of recognized capital gains as compared
with a sale of identical portfolio securities, if any, with a lower tax basis.
The Fund will sell first those shares with the highest tax basis only when it is
in the best interest of the Fund to do so, and reserves the right to sell other
shares when appropriate. In addition, the Fund may, at times, sell portfolio
securities in order to realize capital losses. Such capital losses would be used
to offset realized capital gains thereby reducing capital gain distributions.
Additionally, the Adviser will, consistent with the multi-factor valuation model
discussed above, employ a low portfolio turnover strategy designed to defer the
realization of capital gains.


Under normal conditions, substantially all of the Fund's assets, and, in any
event at least 65% of its total assets, will be invested in common stocks which
are included in the S&P 600 Index. The Fund is expected, however, to maintain a
position in high-quality short-term debt securities and money market instruments
to meet redemption requests. If the Adviser believes that market conditions
warrant a temporary defensive posture, the Fund may invest without limitation in
high-quality short-term debt securities and money market instruments. These
securities and money market instruments may include domestic and foreign
commercial paper, certificates of deposit, bankers' acceptances and time
deposits, U.S. Government Obligations and repurchase agreements.

 

The Fund also may invest in certain specified derivative securities including:
exchange-traded options; over-the-counter options executed with primary dealers,
including long calls and puts and covered calls to enhance return; and U.S.
exchange-traded financial futures approved by the CFTC and options thereon for
market exposure risk management. The Fund may lend its portfolio securities to
qualified institutional investors. The Fund also may invest in restricted,
private placement and other illiquid securities. In addition, the Fund may
invest in securities issued by other investment companies, consistent with the
Fund's investment objective and policies.

 

ABOUT THE INDEXES: The S&P 500 Index is composed of 500 common stocks, which are
chosen by S&P on a statistical basis to be included in the Index. The S&P
SmallCap 600 Index is composed of 600 domestic stocks, which are chosen by S&P
based on, among other things, market size, liquidity and industry group
representation. The S&P SmallCap 600 Index is designed to be a benchmark of
small capitalization stock performance.

 

The inclusion of a stock in the S&P 500 Index or the S&P SmallCap 600 Index in
no way implies that S&P believes the stock to be an attractive investment. The
Indexes are determined, composed and calculated by S&P without regard to the
Funds. S&P is neither a sponsor of, nor in any way affiliated with, the Funds,
and S&P makes no representation or warranty, expressed or implied, on the
advisability of investing in the Funds or as to the ability of the Indexes to
track general stock market performance. S&P disclaims all warranties of
merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose or use with respect to the
Indexes or any data included therein.

 

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER: Generally, the Funds will purchase portfolio securities for
capital appreciation or investment income, or both, and not for short-term
trading profits. While it is not possible to predict exactly annual portfolio
turnover rates, it is expected that under normal market conditions, the annual
portfolio turnover rate for each Fund will not exceed 25%.

 

RISK CONSIDERATIONS: Although the Adviser will seek to achieve the investment
objective of each Fund, there is no assurance that it will be able to do so. No
single fund should be considered, by itself, to provide a complete investment
program for any investor. Investments in a Fund are not insured against loss of
principal.

 

Investments by a Fund in common stocks and other equity securities are subject
to stock market risk. The value of the stocks that the Funds hold, like the
broader stock market, may decline over short or even extended periods.

 

Certain of the Funds' permissible investments may constitute derivative
securities, which are securities whose value is derived, at least in part, from
an underlying index or reference rate. There are certain

 
6
 
<PAGE>

types of derivative securities that can, under certain circumstances,
significantly increase a purchaser's exposure to market or other risks. The
Adviser, however, only purchases derivative securities in circumstances where it
believes such purchases are consistent with a Fund's investment objective and do
not unduly increase the Fund's exposure to market or other risks. For additional
risk information regarding the Funds' investments in particular instruments, see
"Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities."

 

The techniques employed by the Adviser to seek to manage capital gain
distributions will generally only have the effect of deferring the realization
of capital gains. For example, to the extent that the capital gains recognized
on a sale of portfolio securities arise from the sale of specifically-identified
securities with higher tax bases, subsequent sales of the same portfolio
securities will be calculated by reference to the lower tax basis securities
that remain in the portfolio. Under this scenario, an investor who purchases
shares of a Fund after the first sale could receive capital gain distributions
that are higher than the distributions that would have been received if this
methodology had not been used. Therefore, certain investors actually could be
disadvantaged by the techniques employed by the Fund to seek to manage capital
gain distributions, depending on the timing of their purchase of Fund shares.
Even if there are no subsequent sales, upon a redemption or exchange of Fund
shares an investor will have to recognize gain to the extent that the net asset
value of Fund shares at such time exceeds such investor's tax basis in his or
her Fund shares.

 

The various techniques employed by the Funds to manage capital gain
distributions may result in the accumulation of substantial unrealized gains in
the Funds' portfolios. Moreover, the realization of capital gains is not
entirely within a Fund's control because it is at least partly dependent on
shareholder purchase and redemption activity. Capital gain distributions may
vary considerably from year-to-year.

 

INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS: Each Fund is subject to a number of investment
limitations. The following investment limitations are matters of fundamental
policy and may not be changed without the affirmative vote of the holders of a
majority of each Fund's outstanding shares. Other investment limitations that
cannot be changed without such a vote of shareholders are described in the SAI.

 

Each Fund may not:

 
1. Purchase any securities which would cause 25% or more of the value of the
Fund's total assets at the time of such purchase to be invested in the
securities of one or more issuers conducting their principal activities in the
same industry (for purposes of this limitation, U.S. Government securities are
not considered members of any industry.)

2. Make loans, except that a Fund may purchase and hold debt instruments
(whether such instruments are part of a public offering or privately placed),
may enter into repurchase agreements and may lend portfolio securities in
accordance with its investment policies.

 

3. Purchase securities of any one issuer (other than securities issued or
guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities) if,
immediately after such purchase, more than 5% of the value of such Fund's total
assets would be invested in the securities of such issuer, except that up to 25%
of the value of the Fund's total assets may be invested without regard to these
limitations and with respect to 75% of such Fund's assets, the Fund will not
hold more than 10% of the voting securities of any issuer.

 

The investment objective and policies of each Fund, unless otherwise specified,
may be changed without a vote of the Fund's shareholders. If the investment
objective or policies of a Fund change, shareholders should consider whether the
Fund remains an appropriate investment in light of their then current position
and needs.

 

   How Performance Is Shown

 

From time to time the Funds may advertise the total return and yield on a class
of shares. TOTAL RETURN AND YIELD FIGURES ARE BASED ON HISTORICAL DATA AND ARE
NOT INTENDED TO INDICATE FUTURE PERFORMANCE. The "total return" of a class of
shares of a Fund may be calculated on an average annual total return basis or an
aggregate total return basis. Average annual total return refers to the average
annual compounded rates of return over one-, five-, and ten-year periods or the
life of a Fund (as stated in the advertisement) that would equate an initial
amount invested at the beginning of a stated period to the ending redeemable
value of the investment, assuming the reinvestment of all dividend and capital
gain distributions. Aggregate total return reflects the total percentage change
in the value of the investment over the measuring period again assuming the
reinvestment of all dividends and capital gain distributions. Total return may
also be presented for other periods.

 

"Yield" is calculated by dividing the annualized net investment income per share
during a recent 30-day (or one month) period of a class of shares of a Fund by
the maximum public offering price per share on the last day of that period.

 
                                                                               7
 
<PAGE>

Set forth below is certain performance data for the Enhanced Equity Index Common
Trust Fund and Enhanced Small Cap Equity Index Common Trust Fund (the "CTFs"),
each of which is currently managed on behalf of NationsBank by TradeStreet.
(Prior to the formation of TradeStreet in 1995, the CTFs were managed solely by
NationsBank.) The performance data for the CTFs is deemed relevant because the
Enhanced Equity Index and Enhanced Small Cap Equity Index Common Trust Funds
have investment objectives and policies that are substantially similar to those
of Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund,
respectively. Moreover, the portfolio manager of TradeStreet (who currently
manages the CTFs and the Funds) employs the same quantitative investment process
for the Funds that has, and continues to be, utilized for the CTFs. THIS
PERFORMANCE DATA REPRESENTS PAST PERFORMANCE OF THE CTFS AND IS NOT NECESSARILY
INDICATIVE OF THE FUTURE PERFORMANCE OF THE CTFS OR THE FUNDS.

 

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS FOR THE PERIODS
INDICATED THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 1996*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                  Since
                            One         Three        Five       Inception
                           Year         Year         Year      (12/31/88)**
<S>                     <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Enhanced Equity Index
  Common Trust Fund       19.78%       16.91%       14.90%       16.03%
S&P 500 Index             20.33%       17.40%       15.21%       15.79%
Lipper Equity Index+
  Funds Average           19.77%       16.90%       14.70%       15.18%
</TABLE>

 

ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                               Enhanced                    Lipper Equity
                             Equity Index                      Index
                             Common Trust        S&P           Funds
Year                             Fund         500 Index      Average+
<S>                          <C>            <C>            <C>
1989                             34.12%         31.55%         30.58%
1990                             -1.52%         -3.15%         -3.57%
1991                             31.72%         30.56%         29.65%
1992                              5.52%          7.64%          7.12%
1993                             10.47%          9.99%          9.52%
1994                              0.69%          1.31%          0.90%
1995                             37.66%         37.45%         36.82%
</TABLE>

 

TOTAL RETURNS FOR THE PERIODS INDICATED
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 1996*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                            Since
                                             Year-To-     Inception
                             Three Month       Date       (10/1/95)
<S>                          <C>           <C>           <C>
Enhanced Small Cap Equity
  Index Common Trust Fund       4.35%         16.33%        17.25%
S&P 600 Index                   3.21%         14.79%        15.31%
</TABLE>

 

 * The total returns above reflect the deduction of 0.50% of fees and expenses
   per annum. The CTFs are not subject to certain investment limitations,
   diversification requirements, and other restrictions imposed by the 1940 Act
   and the Internal Revenue Code, which if applicable, may have adversely
   affected the performance results of the CTFs.

 

** Prior to 12/31/88 the Enhanced Equity Index Common Trust Fund was managed
   with a different objective and policies and therefore performance prior
   thereto is not included in the prior performance calculations.

 

 + The Lipper Equity Index Funds Average represents the average performance of
   mutual funds with similar objectives monitored by Lipper Analytical Services,
   Inc. during the periods shown.

 

Investment performance, which will vary, is based on many factors, including
market conditions, the composition of a Fund's portfolio and the Fund's
operating expenses. Investment performance also often reflects the risks
associated with such Fund's investment objective and policies. These factors
should be considered when comparing a Fund's investment results to those of
other mutual funds and other investment vehicles. Since yields fluctuate, yield
data cannot necessarily be used to compare an investment in a Fund with bank
deposits, savings accounts, and similar investment alternatives which often
provide an agreed-upon or guaranteed fixed yield for a stated period of time.

 

In addition to Primary B Shares, the Funds offer Primary A, Investor A and
Investor C Shares. Each class of shares may bear different sales charges,
shareholder servicing fees and other expenses, which may cause the performance
of a class to differ from the performance of the other classes. Performance
quotations will be computed separately for each class of a Fund's shares. Any
fees charged by an institution and/or servicing agent directly to its customers'
accounts in connection with investments in the Funds will not be included in
calculations of total return or yield. Each Fund's annual report contains
additional performance information and is available upon request without charge
from the Funds' distributor or your Institution, as defined below.

 

   How The Funds Are Managed

 
The business and affairs of Nations Fund Trust are managed under the direction
of its Board of Trustees. Nations Fund Trust's SAI contains the names of and
general background information concerning each Trustee of Nations Fund Trust.
 
Nations Fund and the Adviser have adopted codes of ethics which contain policies
on personal securities transactions by "access persons," including portfolio
managers and investment analysts. These policies substantially comply in all
material respects with the recommendations set forth in the May 9, 1994 Report
of the Advisory Group on Personal Investing of the Investment Company Institute.
 
8
 
<PAGE>

INVESTMENT ADVISER: NationsBanc Advisors, Inc. serves as investment adviser to
the Funds. NBAI is a wholly owned subsidiary of NationsBank, which in turn is a
wholly owned banking subsidiary of NationsBank Corporation, a bank holding
company organized as a North Carolina corporation. NBAI has its principal
offices at One NationsBank Plaza, Charlotte, North Carolina 28255.

 

TradeStreet Investment Associates, Inc., with principal offices at One
NationsBank Plaza, Charlotte, North Carolina 28255, serves as investment
sub-adviser to the Funds. TradeStreet is a wholly owned subsidiary of
NationsBank. TradeStreet provides investment management services to individuals,
corporations and institutions.

 

Subject to the general supervision of Nations Fund Trust's Board of Trustees and
in accordance with each Fund's investment policies, the Adviser formulates
guidelines and lists of approved investments for each Fund, makes decisions with
respect to and places orders for each Fund's purchases and sales of portfolio
securities and maintains records relating to such purchases and sales. The
Adviser is authorized to allocate purchase and sale orders for portfolio
securities to certain financial institutions, including, in the case of agency
transactions, financial institutions which are affiliated with the Adviser or
which have sold shares in such Funds, if the Adviser believes that the quality
of the transaction and the commission are comparable to what they would be with
other qualified brokerage firms. From time to time, to the extent consistent
with its investment objective, policies and restrictions, each Fund may invest
in securities of companies with which NationsBank has a lending relationship.
For the services provided and expenses assumed pursuant to an Investment
Advisory Agreement, NBAI is entitled to receive advisory fees, computed daily
and paid monthly, at the annual rate of 0.50% of the average daily net assets of
each Fund.

 

From time to time, NBAI and/or TradeStreet may waive or reimburse (either
voluntarily or pursuant to applicable state limitations) advisory fees and/or
expenses payable by a Fund.

 

For the services provided and the expenses assumed pursuant to a Sub-Advisory
Agreement, NBAI will pay TradeStreet sub-advisory fees, computed daily and paid
monthly, at the annual rate of 0.10% of the average daily net assets of each
Fund.

 
Greg W. Golden is a Structured Products Manager, Equity Management for
TradeStreet and is Portfolio Manager for Nations Equity Index Fund, Nations
Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund. He has been
Portfolio Manager for Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund since its inception.
Prior to assuming his position with TradeStreet in 1996, he was Vice President
and Structured Products Manager for the Investment Management Group at
NationsBank. He has worked in the investment community since 1990. His past
experience includes portfolio management, derivatives management and
quantitative analysis for the Investment Management Group at NationsBank and
Sovran Bank of Tennessee. Mr. Golden received a B.B.A. in Finance from Belmont
University. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst candidate and a member of the
Association for Investment Management and Research as well as the North Carolina
Society of Financial Analysts, Inc.
 
Morrison & Foerster LLP, counsel to Nations Fund and special counsel to
NationsBank, has advised NationsBank and Nations Fund that NationsBank and its
affiliates may perform the services contemplated by the Investment Advisory
Agreement and this Prospectus, without violation of the Glass-Steagall Act. Such
counsel has pointed out, however, that there are no controlling judicial or
administrative interpretations or decisions and that future judicial or
administrative interpretations of, or decisions relating to, present federal or
state statutes, including the Glass-Steagall Act, and regulations relating to
the permissible activities of banks and their subsidiaries or affiliates, as
well as future changes in federal or state statutes, including the
Glass-Steagall Act, and regulations and judicial or administrative decisions or
interpretations thereof, could prevent such entities from continuing to perform,
in whole or in part, such services. If any such entity were prohibited from
performing any of such services, it is expected that new agreements would be
proposed or entered into with another entity or entities qualified to perform
such services.
 

OTHER SERVICE PROVIDERS: Stephens Inc. ("Stephens"), with principal offices at
111 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201, serves as the administrator of
Nations Fund pursuant to an Administration Agreement. Pursuant to the terms of
the Administration Agreement, Stephens provides various administrative and
corporate secretarial services to the Funds, including providing general
oversight of other service providers, office space, utilities and various legal
and administrative services in connection with the satisfaction of various
regulatory requirements applicable to the Funds.



First Data Investor Services Group, Inc. ("First Data"), formerly The
Shareholder Services Group, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of First Data
Corporation, with principal offices at One Exchange Place, Boston, Massachusetts
02109, serves as the co-administrator of Nations Fund pursuant to a
Co-Administration Agreement. Under the Co-Administration Agreement, First Data
provides various administrative and accounting services to the Funds including
performing the calculations necessary to determine the net asset value per share
and dividends of each class of shares of the Funds, preparing tax returns and
financial statements and maintaining the portfolio records and certain of the
general accounting records for the Funds.

 

For the services rendered pursuant to the Administration and Co-Administration
Agreements, Stephens and First Data are entitled to receive a combined fee at an
annual rate of up to 0.10% of each Fund's average daily net assets.

 
                                                                               9
 
<PAGE>

NationsBank serves as sub-administrator for Nations Fund pursuant to a
Sub-Administration Agreement. Pursuant to the terms of the Sub-Administration
Agreement, NationsBank assists Stephens in supervising, coordinating and
monitoring various aspects of the Funds' administrative operations. For
providing such services, NationsBank shall be entitled to receive a monthly fee
from Stephens based on an annual rate of 0.01% of the Funds' average daily net
assets.

 

Shares of the Funds are sold on a continuous basis by Stephens, as the Funds'
sponsor and distributor. Stephens is a registered broker/dealer with principal
offices at 111 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201. Nations Fund has
entered into distribution agreements with Stephens which provide that Stephens
has the exclusive right to distribute shares of the Funds. Stephens may pay
service fees or commissions to Institutions which assist customers in purchasing
Primary B Shares of the Funds.

 

First Data serves as the Transfer Agent for the Funds' Primary B Shares.
NationsBank of Texas, N.A. ("NationsBank of Texas" or the "Custodian") serves as
custodian for the assets of the Funds. NationsBank of Texas, which also serves
as the sub-transfer agent for the Funds' Primary B Shares, is located at 1401
Elm Street, Dallas, Texas 75202, and is a wholly owned subsidiary of NationsBank
Corporation. In return for providing custodial services, the Custodian is
entitled to receive, in addition to out-of-pocket expenses, fees payable monthly
(i) at the rate of 1.25% of 1% of the average daily net assets of each Fund,
(ii) $10.00 per repurchase collateral transaction by such Fund, and (iii) $15.00
per purchase, sale and maturity transaction involving such Fund. In return for
providing sub-transfer agency services for the Primary B Shares of Nations Fund,
NationsBank of Texas is entitled to receive an annual fee from First Data of
$251,000.

 
Price Waterhouse LLP serves as independent accountant to Nations Fund. Its
address is 160 Federal Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110.
 

EXPENSES: The accrued expenses of each Fund, as well as certain expenses
attributable to Primary B Shares, are deducted from the Fund's total accrued
income before dividends are declared. These expenses include, but are not
limited to: fees paid to the Adviser, NationsBank, Stephens and First Data;
taxes; interest; Trustees' fees; federal and state securities registration and
qualification fees; brokerage fees and commissions; costs of preparing and
printing prospectuses for regulatory purposes and for distribution to existing
shareholders; charges of the Custodian and Transfer Agent; certain insurance
premiums; outside auditing and legal expenses; costs of shareholder reports and
shareholder meetings; other expenses which are not expressly assumed by the
Adviser, NationsBank, Stephens or First Data under their respective agreements
with Nations Fund; and any extraordinary expenses. Primary B Shares also bear
certain shareholder servicing costs. Any general expenses of Nations Fund Trust
that are not readily identifiable as belonging to a particular investment
portfolio are allocated among all portfolios in the proportion that the assets
of a portfolio bears to the assets of Nations Fund Trust or in such other manner
as the Board of Trustees determines is fair and equitable.

 
   Organization And History
 

The Funds are members of the Nations Fund Family, which consists of Nations Fund
Trust, Nations Fund, Inc., Nations Fund Portfolios, Inc. and Nations
Institutional Reserves. The Nations Fund Family currently consists of more than
43 distinct investment portfolios and total assets in excess of $18 billion.

 

NATIONS FUND TRUST: Nations Fund Trust was organized as a Massachusetts business
trust on May 6, 1985. Nations Fund Trust's fiscal year end is March 31; prior to
1996, Nations Fund Trust's fiscal year end was November 30. The Funds currently
offer four classes of shares -- Primary A Shares, Primary B Shares, Investor C
Shares and Investor A Shares. This Prospectus relates only to the Primary B
Shares of Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund of
Nations Fund Trust. To obtain additional information regarding the Funds' other
classes of shares which may be available to you, contact your Institution (as
defined below) or Nations Fund at 1-800-626-2275.

 
Each share of Nations Fund Trust is without par value, represents an equal
proportionate interest in the related fund with other shares of the same class,
and is entitled to such dividends and distributions out of the income earned on
the assets belonging to such fund as are declared in the discretion of Nations
Fund Trust's Board of Trustees. Nations Fund Trust's Declaration of Trust
authorizes the Board of Trustees to classify or reclassify any class of shares
into one or more series of shares.

Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each full share held and a
proportionate fractional vote for each fractional share held. Shareholders of
each fund of Nations Fund Trust will vote in the aggregate and not by fund, and
shareholders of each fund will vote in the aggregate and not by class except as
otherwise expressly required by law or when the Board of Trustees determines
that the matter to be voted on affects only the interests of shareholders of a
particular fund or class. See Nations Fund Trust's SAI for examples of when the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act") requires voting by fund.
 

As of October 15, 1996, NationsBank and its affiliates possessed or shared power
to dispose or vote with respect to more than 25% of the outstanding shares of
certain classes of shares of Nations Fund Trust and therefore could be
considered to be a controlling person of these classes and series of Nations
Fund Trust for purposes of

 
10
 
<PAGE>
the 1940 Act. For more detailed information concerning the percentage of each
class or series of shares over which NationsBank and its affiliates possessed or
shared power to dispose or vote as of a certain date, see Nations Fund Trust's
SAI.
 
Nations Fund Trust does not presently intend to hold annual meetings except as
required by the 1940 Act. Shareholders will have the right to remove Trustees.
Nations Fund Trust's Code of Regulations provides that special meetings of
shareholders shall be called at the written request of the shareholders entitled
to vote at least 10% of the outstanding shares of Nations Fund Trust entitled to
be voted at such meeting.
 
About Your Investment
 
   How To Buy Shares
 
Primary B Shares may be purchased through banks, broker/dealers or other
financial institutions (including certain affiliates of NationsBank)
("Institutions") that have entered into a shareholder administration agreement
(an "Administration Agreement") with Nations Fund and/or a selling agreement
with Stephens.
 

Primary B Shares are purchased at net asset value per share without the

imposition of a sales charge according to procedures established by the
Institution. Institutions, however, may charge the accounts of their customers
("Customers") for services provided in connection with the purchase of shares.
Purchases of shares may be effected on days on which the New York Stock Exchange
(the "Exchange") is open for business ("NYSE Business Day"). Unless otherwise
specified, the term "Business Day" in this Prospectus refers to a NYSE Business
Day.

 
There is a minimum initial investment of $1,000 for each record holder; there is
no minimum subsequent investment.
 
Pursuant to the Administration Agreements, Institutions will provide various
shareholder services for their Customers that own Primary B Shares. From time to
time, Nations Fund may voluntarily reduce the maximum fees payable for
shareholder services.
 

Nations Fund reserves the right to reject any purchase order. The issuance of
Primary B Shares is recorded on the books of the Funds, and share certificates
are not issued. It is the responsibility of Institutions to record beneficial
ownership of Primary B Shares and to reflect such ownership in the account
statements provided to their Customers.

 

EFFECTIVE TIME OF PURCHASES: Purchase orders for Primary B Shares which are
received by Stephens or by the Transfer Agent before the close of regular
trading hours on the Exchange (currently 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) on any
Business Day are priced according to the net asset value determined on that day
but are not executed until 4:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the Business Day on which
immediately available funds in payment of the purchase price are received by the
Funds' Custodian. Such payment must be received no later than 4:00 p.m., Eastern
time, by the third Business Day following receipt of the order. If funds are not
received by such date, the order will not be accepted and notice thereof will be
given to the Institution placing the order. Payment for orders which are not
received or accepted will be returned after prompt inquiry to the sending
Institution.

 
Institutions are responsible for transmitting orders for purchases of Primary B
Shares by their Customers, and for delivering required funds, on a timely basis.
It is the responsibility of Stephens to transmit orders it receives to Nations
Fund.
 
   How To Redeem Shares
 
Customers may redeem all or part of their Primary B Shares in accordance with
instructions and limitations pertaining to their accounts at an Institution. It
is the responsibility of the Institutions to transmit redemption orders to
Stephens or to the Transfer Agent and to credit their Customers' accounts with
the redemption proceeds on a timely basis. It is the responsibility of Stephens
to transmit orders it receives to Nations Fund. No charge for wiring redemption
payments is imposed by Nations Fund, although the Institutions may charge their
Customer accounts for these or other services provided in connection with the
redemption of Primary B Shares. Information concerning these services and any
charges are available from the Institutions. Redemption orders are effected at
the net asset value per share next determined after acceptance of the order by
Stephens or by the Transfer Agent. Redemption proceeds are normally remitted in
federal funds wired to the redeeming Institution within three Business Days
following receipt of the order.
 
                                                                              11
 
<PAGE>

Nations Fund may redeem a shareholder's Primary B Shares if the balance in such
shareholder's account drops below $500 as a result of redemptions, and the
shareholder does not increase his or her balance to at least $500 on 60 days'
written notice. If a shareholder has agreed with a particular Institution to
maintain a minimum balance in his or her account at the Institution, and the
balance in such Institution account falls below that minimum, the shareholder
may be obliged to redeem all or a part of his or her Primary B Shares in the
Funds to the extent necessary to maintain the required minimum balance in such
Institution account. Nations Fund also may redeem shares involuntarily or make
payment for redemption in readily marketable securities or other property under
certain circumstances in accordance with the 1940 Act.

 
   How To Exchange Shares
 

The exchange feature enables a shareholder of Primary B Shares of a Fund to
acquire Primary B Shares of another fund when that shareholder believes that a
shift between Funds is an appropriate investment decision. An exchange of
Primary B Shares for Primary B Shares of another fund is made on the basis of
the next calculated net asset value per share of each fund after the exchange
order is received.

 

The Funds and each of the other funds of Nations Fund may limit the number of
times this exchange feature may be exercised by a shareholder within a specified
period of time. Also, the exchange feature may be terminated or revised at any
time by Nations Fund upon such notice as may be required by applicable
regulatory agencies (presently 60 days for termination or material revision),
provided that the exchange feature may be terminated or materially revised
without notice under certain unusual circumstances.

 
The current prospectus for each fund of Nations Fund describes its investment
objective and policies, and shareholders should obtain a copy and examine it
carefully before investing. Exchanges are subject to the minimum investment
requirement and any other conditions imposed by each fund. In the case of any
shareholder holding a share certificate or certificates, no exchanges may be
made until all applicable share certificates have been received by the Transfer
Agent and deposited in the shareholder's account. An exchange will be treated
for Federal income tax purposes the same as a redemption of shares, on which the
shareholder may realize a capital gain or loss. However, the ability to deduct
capital losses on an exchange may be limited in situations where there is an
exchange of shares within 90 days after the shares are purchased.
 
Nations Fund reserves the right to reject any exchange request. Only shares that
may legally be sold in the state of the investor's residence may be acquired in
an exchange. Only shares of a class that is accepting investments generally may
be acquired in an exchange.
 

Provided your Institution allows telephone exchanges, during periods of
significant economic or market change, telephone exchanges may be difficult to
complete. In such event, shares may be exchanged by mailing your request
directly to the Institution through which the original shares were purchased.
Investors should consult their Institution or Stephens for further information
regarding exchanges.

 
Primary B Shares may be exchanged by directing a request directly to the
Institution through which the original Primary B Shares were purchased or in
some cases Stephens or the Transfer Agent. Investors should consult their
Institution or Stephens for further information regarding exchanges. Your
exchange feature may be governed by your account agreement with your
Institution.
 
   Shareholder Administration Arrangements
 

The Fund has adopted a Shareholder Administration Plan (the "Administration
Plan") pursuant to which Institutions provide shareholder administrative
services to their Customers who from time to time beneficially own Primary B
Shares. Payments under the Administration Plan are calculated daily and paid
monthly at a rate or rates set from time to time by the Funds, provided that the
annual rate may not exceed 0.60% of the average daily net asset value of the
Primary B Shares beneficially owned by Customers with whom the Institutions have
a servicing relationship. Additionally, in no event may the portion of the
shareholder administration fee that constitutes a "service fee," as that term is
defined in Article III, Section 26(b)(9) of the Rules of Fair Practice of the
NASD, exceed 0.25% of the average daily net asset value of the Primary B Shares
of a Fund. Holders of Primary B Shares will bear all fees paid to Institutions
under the Administration Plan.

 
Such shareholder administration services supplement the services provided by
Stephens, First Data and the Transfer Agent to shareholders of record. The
shareholder administration services provided by Institutions may include: (i)
aggregating and processing purchase and redemption requests for Primary B Shares
from Customers and transmitting promptly net purchase and
 
12
 
<PAGE>

redemption orders to Stephens or the Transfer Agent; (ii) providing Customers
with a service that invests the assets of their accounts in Primary B Shares
pursuant to specific or pre-authorized instructions; (iii) processing dividend
and distribution payments from the Funds on behalf of Customers; (iv) providing
information periodically to Customers showing their positions in Primary B
Shares; (v) arranging for bank wires; (vi) responding to Customers' inquiries
concerning their investment in Primary B Shares; (vii) providing sub-accounting
with respect to Primary B Shares beneficially owned by Customers or the
information necessary for sub-accounting; (viii) if required by law, forwarding
shareholder communications (such as proxies, shareholder reports, annual and
semi-annual financial statements and dividend, distribution and tax notices) to
Customers; (ix) forwarding to Customers proxy statements and proxies containing
any proposals regarding the Administration Agreement; (x) employee benefit plan
recordkeeping, administration, custody and trustee services; (xi) general
shareholder liaison services; and (xii) providing such other similar services as
may be reasonably requested.

 
Nations Fund may suspend or reduce payments under the Administration Plan at any
time, and payments are subject to the continuation of the Administration Plan
described above and the terms of the Administration Agreements between
Institutions and Nations Fund. See the SAI for more details on the
Administration Plan.
 
The Administration Plan also provides that, to the extent any portion of the
fees payable under the Administration Plan is deemed to be for services
primarily intended to result in the sale of Fund shares, such fees are deemed
approved and may be paid under the Administration Plan. Accordingly, the
Administration Plan has been approved and will be operated pursuant to Rule
12b-1 under the 1940 Act.
 
Nations Fund understands that Institutions may charge fees to their Customers
who are the owners of Primary B Shares in connection with their Customers'
accounts. These fees would be in addition to any amounts which may be received
by an Institution under its Administration Agreement with Nations Fund. The
Administration Agreement requires an Institution to disclose to its Customers
any compensation payable to the Institution by Nations Fund and any other
compensation payable by the Customers in connection with the investment of their
assets in Primary B Shares. Customers of Institutions should read this
Prospectus in light of the terms governing their accounts with their
Institutions.
 
Conflict of interest restrictions may apply to the receipt by Institutions of
compensation from Nations Fund in connection with the investment of fiduciary
assets in Primary B Shares. Institutions, including banks regulated by the
Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Reserve Board, or the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, and investment advisers and other money managers subject
to the jurisdiction of the SEC, the Department of Labor, or state securities
commissions, are urged to consult their legal advisers before investing such
assets in Primary B Shares.
 

   How The Funds Value Their Shares

 

The net asset value of a share of each class is calculated by dividing the total
value of its assets, less liabilities, by the number of shares in the class
outstanding. Shares of the Funds are valued as of the close of regular trading
on the Exchange (currently 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) on each NYSE Business Day.
Currently, the days on which the Exchange is closed (other than weekends) are:
New Year's Day, President's Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day (observed),
Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day.

 
Portfolio securities for which market quotations are readily available are
valued at market value. Short-term investments that will mature in 60 days or
less are valued at amortized cost, which approximates market value. All other
securities are valued at their fair value following procedures approved by the
Trustees.
 
   How Dividends And Distributions Are Made;
   Tax Information
 

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Even though the Funds seek to manage taxable
distributions, the Funds may be expected to earn and distribute taxable income
and may also be expected to realize and distribute capital gains from time to
time. Dividends from net investment income are declared and paid each calendar
quarter by the Funds. The Funds' net realized capital gains (including net
short-term capital gains) are distributed at least annually.

 

Primary B Shares of the Funds are eligible to receive dividends when declared,
provided however, that the purchase order for such shares is received at least
one day prior to the dividend declaration and such shares continue to be
eligible for dividends through and including the day before the redemption order
is executed.

 
                                                                              13
 
<PAGE>

The net asset value of Primary B Shares will be reduced by the amount of any
dividend or distribution. Dividends and distributions are paid in cash within
five Business Days of the end of the quarter to which the dividend relates.
Certain purchasing Institutions may provide for the reinvestment of dividends in
the form of additional Primary B Shares of the same Fund. Dividends and
distributions payable to a shareholder are paid in cash within five Business
Days after a shareholder's complete redemption of his or her Primary B Shares in
a Fund. Each Fund's net investment income available for distribution to the
holders of Primary B Shares will be reduced by the amount of shareholder
servicing fees payable to Institutions under the Servicing Agreements.

 

TAX INFORMATION: Each Fund intends to qualify as a separate "regulated
investment company" under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
"Code"). Such qualification relieves a Fund of liability for Federal income tax
to the extent its earnings are distributed in accordance with the Code.

 

Each Fund intends to distribute substantially all of its investment company
taxable income and net tax-exempt income each taxable year. Such distributions
by a Fund of its net investment income (including net foreign currency gains)
and the excess, if any, of its net short-term capital gain over its net
long-term capital loss will be taxable as ordinary income to shareholders who
are not currently exempt from Federal income tax, whether such income is
received in cash or reinvested in additional shares.

 

Corporate shareholders may be entitled to the dividends received deduction for
distributions from a Fund's investment in the stock of domestic corporations to
the extent of the total qualifying dividends received by the Fund.

 

Substantially all of the net realized long-term capital gains of the Funds, if
any, will be distributed at least annually to the Funds' shareholders. The Funds
will generally have no tax liability with respect to such gains, and the
distributions will be taxable to such shareholders who are not currently exempt
from Federal income tax as long-term capital gains, regardless of how long the
shareholders have held such Funds' shares and whether such gains are received in
cash or reinvested in additional shares.

 
Each year, shareholders will be notified as to the amount and Federal tax status
of all dividends and capital gains paid during the prior year. Such dividends
and capital gains may also be subject to state and local taxes.
 

Dividends declared in October, November or December of any year payable to
shareholders of record on a specified date in such months will be deemed to have
been received by shareholders and paid by a Fund on December 31 of such year in
the event such dividends are actually paid during January of the following year.

 

Federal law requires Nations Fund to withhold 31% from any dividends (other than
exempt-interest dividends) paid by Nations Fund and/or redemptions (including
exchange redemptions) that occur in certain shareholder accounts if the
shareholder has not properly furnished a certified correct Taxpayer
Identification Number and has not certified that withholding does not apply. If
the Internal Revenue Service has notified Nations Fund that the Taxpayer
Identification Number listed on a shareholder account is incorrect according to
its records, or that the shareholder is subject to backup withholding, a Fund is
required by the Internal Revenue Service to withhold 31% of any dividend (other
than exempt-interest dividends) and/or redemption (including exchange
redemptions). Amounts withheld are applied to the shareholder's Federal tax
liability, and a refund may be obtained from the Internal Revenue Service if
withholding results in overpayment of taxes. Federal law also requires each Fund
to withhold 30% or the applicable tax treaty rate from dividends paid to certain
nonresident alien, non-U.S. partnership and non-U.S. corporation shareholder
accounts.

 

The foregoing discussion is based on tax laws and regulations which were in
effect as of the date of this Prospectus and summarizes only some of the
important tax considerations generally affecting the Funds and their
shareholders. It is not intended as a substitute for careful tax planning.
Accordingly, potential investors should consult their tax advisors with specific
reference to their own tax situations. Further tax information is contained in
the SAI.

 
   Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities
 

The following are summary descriptions of certain types of instruments in which
a Fund may invest. The "How Objectives Are Pursued" section of the Prospectus
identifies such Fund's permissible investments, and the SAI contains more
information concerning such investments.

 

BANK INSTRUMENTS: Bank instruments consist mainly of certificates of deposit,
time deposits and bankers' acceptances. The Funds will limit their investments
in bank obligations so they do not exceed 25% of each Fund's total assets at the
time of purchase.

 

BORROWINGS: When a Fund borrows money, the net asset value of a share may be
subject to greater fluctuation until the borrowing is paid off. The Funds may
borrow money from banks for temporary purposes in amounts of up to one-third of
their respective total assets, provided that borrowings in excess of 5% of the

 
14
 
<PAGE>

value of the Fund's total assets must be repaid prior to the purchase of
portfolio securities. Under the requirements of the 1940 Act, the Funds are
required to maintain an asset coverage (including the proceeds of the
borrowings) of at least 300% of all borrowings.

 

COMMERCIAL INSTRUMENTS: Commercial instruments consist of short-term U.S.
dollar-denominated obligations issued by domestic corporations or foreign
corporations and foreign commercial banks. Investments by a Fund in commercial
paper will consist of issues rated in a manner consistent with such Fund's
investment policies and objective. In addition, a Fund may acquire unrated
commercial paper and corporate bonds that are determined by the Adviser at the
time of purchase to be of comparable quality to rated instruments that may be
acquired by a Fund. Commercial instruments include variable-rate master demand
notes, which are unsecured instruments that permit the indebtedness thereunder
to vary and provide for periodic adjustments in the interest rate, and variable-
and floating-rate instruments.

 

CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES, PREFERRED STOCK, AND WARRANTS: The Funds may invest in
debt securities convertible into or exchangeable for equity securities,
preferred stocks or warrants. Preferred stocks are securities that represent an
ownership interest in a corporation providing the owner with claims on a
company's earnings and assets before common stock owners, but after bond or
other debt security owners. Warrants are options to buy a stated number of
shares of common stock at a specified price any time during the life of the
warrants.

 

FUTURES, OPTIONS AND OTHER DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS: The Funds may attempt to
reduce the overall level of investment risk of particular securities and attempt
to protect a Fund against adverse market movements by investing in futures,
options and other derivative instruments. These include the purchase and writing
of options on securities (including index options), and investing in futures
contracts for the purchase or sale of instruments based on financial indices,
including interest rate indices or indices of U.S. Government, equity or fixed
income securities ("futures contracts"), options on futures contracts, forward
contracts and swaps and swap-related products such as interest rate swaps,
currency swaps, caps, collars and floors.

 

The use of futures, options, forward contracts and swaps exposes a Fund to
additional investment risks and transaction costs. If the Adviser incorrectly
analyzes market conditions or does not employ the appropriate strategy with
respect to these instruments, a Fund could be left in a less favorable position.
Additional risks inherent in the use of futures, options, forward contracts and
swaps include: imperfect correlation between the price of futures, options and
forward contracts and movements in the prices of the securities or currencies
being hedged; the possible absence of a liquid secondary market for any
particular instrument at any time; and the possible need to defer closing out
certain hedged positions to avoid adverse tax consequences. A Fund may not
purchase put and call options which are traded on a national stock exchange in
an amount exceeding 5% of its net assets. Further information on the use of
futures, options and other derivative instruments, and the associated risks, is
contained in the SAI.

 

ILLIQUID SECURITIES: Certain securities may be sold only pursuant to certain
legal restrictions, and may be difficult to sell. The Funds will not knowingly
invest more than 15% of the value of their respective net assets in securities
that are illiquid or such lower percentage as may be required by the states in
which the appropriate Fund sells its shares. Repurchase agreements, time
deposits and guaranteed investment contracts that do not provide for payment to
a Fund within seven days after notice, and illiquid restricted securities are
subject to the limitation on illiquid securities.

 

If otherwise consistent with its investment objective and policies, certain
Funds may purchase securities which are not registered under the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended (the "1933 Act") but which can be sold to "qualified
institutional buyers" in accordance with Rule 144A or otherwise, under the 1933
Act, or which were issued under Section 4(2) of the 1933 Act. Any such security
will not be considered illiquid so long as it is determined by a Fund's Board of
Trustees or the Adviser, acting under guidelines approved and monitored by such
Fund's Board, after considering trading activity, availability of reliable price
information and other relevant information, that an adequate trading market
exists for that security. To the extent that, for a period of time, qualified
institutional or other buyers cease purchasing such restricted securities
pursuant to Rule 144A or otherwise, the level of illiquidity of a Fund holding
such securities may increase during such period.

 

MONEY MARKET INSTRUMENTS: The term "money market instruments" refers to
instruments with remaining maturities of one year or less. Money market
instruments may include, among other instruments, certain U.S. Treasury
obligations, U.S. Government obligations, bank instruments, commercial
instruments, repurchase agreements and municipal securities. Such instruments
are described in this Appendix A.

 

OTHER INVESTMENT COMPANIES: Each Fund may invest in securities issued by other
investment companies to the extent that such investments are consistent with the
Fund's investment objective and policies and permissible under the 1940 Act. As
a shareholder of another investment company, a Fund would bear, along with other
shareholders, its pro rata portion of the other investment company's expenses,
including advisory fees. These expenses would be in addition to the advisory and
other expenses that a Fund bears directly in connection with its own operations.

 
                                                                              15
 
<PAGE>

REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS: A repurchase agreement involves the purchase of a
security by a Fund and a simultaneous agreement (generally with a bank or
broker/dealer) to repurchase that security from the Fund at a specified price
and date or upon demand. This technique offers a method of earning income on
idle cash. A risk associated with repurchase agreements is the failure of the
seller to repurchase the securities as agreed, which may cause a Fund to suffer
a loss if the market value of such securities declines before they can be
liquidated on the open market. Repurchase agreements with a duration of more
than seven days are considered illiquid securities and are subject to the limit
stated above. A Fund may enter into repurchase agreements jointly with other
investment portfolios of Nations Fund.

 

SECURITIES LENDING: To increase return on portfolio securities, the Funds may
lend their portfolio securities to broker/dealers and other institutional
investors pursuant to agreements requiring that the loans be continuously
secured by collateral equal at all times in value to at least the market value
of the securities loaned. There is a risk of delay in receiving collateral or in
recovering the securities loaned or even a loss of rights in the collateral
should the borrower of the securities fail financially. However, loans are made
only to borrowers deemed by the Adviser to be credit worthy and when, in its
judgment, the income to be earned from the loan justifies the attendant risks.
The aggregate of all outstanding loans of a Fund may not exceed 30% of the value
of its total assets.

 
U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS: U.S. Government obligations consist of marketable
securities and instruments issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or any of
its agencies, authorities or instrumentalities. Direct obligations are issued by
the U.S. Treasury and include all U.S. Treasury instruments. U.S. Treasury
obligations differ only in their interest rates, maturities and time of
issuance. Obligations of U.S. Government agencies, authorities and
instrumentalities are issued by government-sponsored agencies and enterprises
acting under authority of Congress. Although obligations of federal agencies,
authorities and instrumentalities are not debts of the U.S. Treasury, some are
backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury, such as direct
pass-through certificates of the Government National Mortgage Association; some
are supported by the right of the issuer to borrow from the U.S. Government,
such as obligations of Federal Home Loan Banks, and some are backed only by the
credit of the issuer itself, such as obligations of the Federal National
Mortgage Association. No assurance can be given that the U.S. Government would
provide financial support to government-sponsored instrumentalities if it is not
obligated to do so by law. The market value of U.S. Government obligations may
fluctuate due to fluctuations in market interest rates. As a general matter, the
value of debt instruments, including U.S. Government obligations, declines when
market interest rates increase and rises when market interest rates decrease.
Certain types of U.S. Government obligations are subject to fluctuations in
yield or value due to their structure or contract terms.
 
WHEN-ISSUED, DELAYED DELIVERY AND FORWARD COMMITMENT SECURITIES: The purchase of
new issues of securities on a "when-issued," "delayed delivery" or "forward
commitment" basis occurs when the payment for and delivery of securities takes
place at a future date. Because actual payment for and delivery of such
securities generally take place 15 to 45 days after the purchase date,
purchasers of such securities bear the risk that interest rates on debt
securities at the time of delivery may be higher or lower than those contracted
for on the security purchased.
 
16
 

<PAGE>
Prospectus
 

                                  INVESTOR A SHARES
                                   OCTOBER 15, 1996

 

This Prospectus describes NATIONS MANAGED INDEX
FUND and NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND (the
"Funds") of Nations Fund Trust, an open-end
management investment company in the Nations Fund
Family ("Nations Fund" or "Nations Fund Family").
This Prospectus describes one class of shares of
the Funds -- Investor A Shares.

 

This Prospectus sets forth concisely the
information about the Funds that a prospective
purchaser of Investor A Shares should consider
before investing. Investors should read this
Prospectus and retain it for future reference.
Additional information about Nations Fund Trust is
contained in a separate Statement of Additional
Information (the "SAI") that has been filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC")
and is available upon request without charge by
writing or calling Nations Fund at its address or
telephone number shown below. The SAI, dated
October 15, 1996, is incorporated by reference in
its entirety into this Prospectus. NationsBanc
Advisors, Inc. ("NBAI") is the investment adviser
to the Funds. TradeStreet Investment Associates,
Inc. ("TradeStreet") is investment sub-adviser to
the Funds. As used herein the "Adviser" shall mean
NBAI and/or TradeStreet as the context may require.

 

SHARES OF NATIONS FUND ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OTHER
OBLIGATIONS OF, OR ISSUED, ENDORSED OR GUARANTEED
BY, NATIONSBANK, N.A. ("NATIONSBANK") OR ANY OF ITS
AFFILIATES. SUCH SHARES ARE NOT INSURED BY THE U.S.
GOVERNMENT, THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD OR ANY OTHER
GOVERNMENT AGENCY. AN INVESTMENT IN THE FUNDS
INVOLVES CERTAIN RISKS, INCLUDING POSSIBLE LOSS OF
PRINCIPAL.

 
NATIONSBANK AND CERTAIN OF ITS AFFILIATES PROVIDE
CERTAIN OTHER SERVICES TO NATIONS FUND, FOR WHICH
THEY ARE COMPENSATED. STEPHENS INC., WHICH IS NOT
AFFILIATED WITH NATIONSBANK, IS THE SPONSOR AND
ADMINISTRATOR AND SERVES AS THE DISTRIBUTOR FOR
NATIONS FUND.
 
THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR
DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION, NOR
HAS THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY
STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE
ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY
REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL
OFFENSE.
 

                                                Nations
                                                Managed
                                                Index Fund

                                                Nations
                                                Managed
                                                SmallCap
                                                Index Fund


 
                                                For Fund information call:
                                                1-800-321-7854
                                                Nations Fund
                                                c/o Stephens Inc.
                                                One NationsBank Plaza
                                                33rd Floor
                                                Charlotte, NC 28255
 
                                                (Nations Fund Logo appears here)
 
NF-96698-1096
 
<PAGE>
                             Table  Of  Contents


About The Funds



                             Prospectus Summary                                3
 
                             Expenses Summary                                  4
 

                             Objectives                                        5

 

                             How The Objectives Are Pursued                    5

 

                             How Performance Is Shown                          8

 

                             How The Funds Are Managed                        10

 

                             Organization And History                         12



About Your Investment
 
 

                             How To Buy Shares                                13

 

                             How To Redeem Shares                             15

 

                             How To Exchange Shares                           16

 

                             Shareholder Servicing And Distribution Plan      17

 

                             How The Funds Value Their Shares                 18

 

                             How Dividends And Distributions are Made; Tax
                             Information                                      18

 

                             Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities               20

 
 


                             NO PERSON HAS BEEN AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY
                             INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS NOT
                             CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS, OR IN THE FUNDS' SAI
                             INCORPORATED HEREIN BY REFERENCE, IN CONNECTION
                             WITH THE OFFERING MADE BY THIS PROSPECTUS AND, IF
                             GIVEN OR MADE, SUCH INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS
                             MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED
                             BY NATIONS FUND OR ITS DISTRIBUTOR. THIS PROSPECTUS
                             DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFERING BY NATIONS FUND OR
                             BY THE DISTRIBUTOR IN ANY JURISDICTION IN WHICH 
                             SUCH OFFERING MAY NOT LAWFULLY BE MADE.
 

2
 
<PAGE>
About The Funds
 
   Prospectus Summary
 
(Bullet) TYPE OF COMPANY: Open-end management investment company.
 

(Bullet) INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES:

 

         (Bullet) Nations Managed Index Fund's investment objective is to seek,
                  over the long-term, to provide a total return which (gross of
                  fees and expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard &
                  Poor's 500 Composite Stock Price Index.

 

        (Bullet) Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund's investment objective is 
                 to seek, over the long-term, to provide a total return which 
                 (gross of fees and expenses) exceeds the total return of the 
                 Standard & Poor's SmallCap 600 Index.

 

        (Bullet) When consistent with the Funds' objectives, the Funds will 
                 employ various techniques to manage capital gain 
                 distributions.

 

(Bullet) INVESTMENT ADVISER: NationsBanc Advisors, Inc. serves as the investment
         adviser to the Funds. NBAI provides investment advice to more than 43
         investment company portfolios in the Nations Fund Family. TradeStreet
         Investment Associates, Inc. provides sub-advisory services to the
         Funds. See "How The Funds Are Managed."

 

(Bullet) DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations
         Managed SmallCap Index Fund declare and pay dividends from net
         investment income each calendar quarter. Each Fund's net realized
         capital gains, including net short-term capital gains, are distributed
         at least annually.

 

(Bullet) RISK FACTORS: Although the Adviser seeks to achieve the investment
         objective of the Funds, there is no assurance that it will be able to
         do so. Investments in the Funds are not insured against loss of
         principal. Investments by the Funds in common stocks and other equity
         securities are subject to stock market risk, which is the risk that the
         value of the stocks the Funds hold may decline over short or even
         extended periods. Certain of the Funds' permissible investments may
         constitute derivative securities. Certain types of derivative
         securities can, under certain circumstances, significantly increase an
         investor's exposure to market or other risks. For a discussion of these
         and other factors, see "How Objectives Are Pursued -- Risk
         Considerations" and "Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities."

 
(Bullet) MINIMUM PURCHASE: $1,000 minimum initial investment per record holder
         except that the minimum initial investment is: $500 for Individual
         Retirement Account ("IRA") investors; $250 for non-working spousal
         IRAs; and $100 for investors participating on a monthly basis in the
         Systematic Investment Plan. There is no minimum investment amount for
         investments by certain 401(k) and employee pension plans or salary
         reduction -- Individual Retirement Accounts. The minimum subsequent
         investment is $100, except for investments pursuant to the Systematic
         Investment Plan. See "How To Buy Shares."
 
                                                                               3
 
<PAGE>
   Expenses Summary
 

Expenses are one of several factors to consider when investing in the Funds. The
following tables summarize shareholder transaction and operating expenses for
Investor A Shares of the Funds. The Examples show the cumulative expenses
attributable to a hypothetical $1,000 investment in Investor A Shares of the
indicated Fund over specified periods.

 
INVESTOR A SHARES
 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                 Nations            Nations
                                                                                                 Managed            Managed
                                                                                                  Index            SmallCap
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES                                                                  Fund            Index Fund
<S>                                                                                         <C>                <C>
Maximum Sales Load Imposed on Purchases (as a percentage of offering price)                          None               None
Maximum Deferred Sales Charge (as a percentage of the lower of the original purchase price
  or redemption proceeds)                                                                            None               None

 
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES
(as a percentage of average net assets)
 

Management Fees (After Fee Waivers)                                                                  .30%              0.30%
Rule 12b-1 Fees (including shareholder servicing fees)                                               .25%              0.25%
Other Expenses                                                                                       .20%              0.20%
Total Operating Expenses (After Fee Waivers)                                                         .75%              0.75%
</TABLE>

 

EXAMPLES:

 

You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment in Investor A Shares
of the Funds, assuming (1) a 5% annual return and (2) redemption at the end of
each time period.

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                  Nations              Nations
                                                                                                  Managed              Managed
                                                                                                   Index              SmallCap
                                                                                                   Fund              Index Fund
<S>                                                                                         <C>                  <C>
1 Year                                                                                           $       8            $       8
3 Years                                                                                          $      24            $      24
</TABLE>

 

The purpose of the foregoing tables is to assist an investor in understanding
the various shareholder transaction and operating expenses that an investor in
Investor A Shares will bear either directly or indirectly. The figures in the
above tables are based on estimates for the fiscal year and have been restated
as necessary to reflect anticipated fee waivers. There is no assurance that any
fee waivers and reimbursements will continue beyond the current fiscal year. If
fee waivers and/or reimbursements are discontinued, the amounts contained in the
"Examples" above may increase. For a more complete description of the Funds'
operating expenses, see "How The Funds Are Managed." For a more complete
description of the Rule 12b-1 and shareholder servicing fees payable by the
Funds, see "Shareholder Servicing And Distribution Plan."

 

Absent fee waivers, "Management Fees" and "Total Operating Expenses" would be
 .50% and .95%, respectively, for both Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations
Managed SmallCap Index Fund.

 
4
 
<PAGE>
THE FOREGOING SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED TO BE AN ACTUAL REPRESENTATION OF PAST OR
FUTURE EXPENSES OR PERFORMANCE. ACTUAL EXPENSES AND RATES OF RETURN MAY BE
GREATER OR LESS THAN THOSE SHOWN.
 

   Objectives

 

NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND: Nations Managed Index Fund's investment objective is
to seek, over the long-term, to provide a total return which (gross of fees and
expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard & Poor's 500 Composite Stock
Price Index.

 

NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND: Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund's
investment objective is to seek, over the long-term, to provide a total return
which (gross of fees and expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard &
Poor's SmallCap 600 Index.

 

   How The Objectives Are Pursued

 

NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND: In seeking to achieve its investment objective, the
Fund will invest in selected equity securities that are included in the Standard
& Poor's 500 Composite Stock Price Index (the "S&P 500 Index")1. The S&P 500
Index is a value weighted index consisting of 500 common stocks chosen for
market size, liquidity and industry group representation.

 

Unlike traditional index funds, the Fund has a "managed" aspect. The Adviser
believes that a managed equity index portfolio can provide investors with
positive incremental performance relative to the S&P 500 Index while minimizing
the downside risk of underperforming the Index over time.

 

The initial stock universe considered by the Adviser is the S&P 500 Index. The
Adviser ranks the attractiveness of each security according to a multi-factor
valuation model. Both value and momentum factors are considered in the ranking
process. Value factors such as book value, earnings yield and cash flow measure
a stock's intrinsic worth versus its market price, while momentum
characteristics such as price momentum, earnings growth and earnings
acceleration view a stock relative to others in the same industry. Each stock is
assigned a ranking from 1 to 10 (best to worst). The Adviser then screens out
the lower rated stocks resulting in a portfolio of 350 to 400 holdings that
capture the investment characteristics of the Index.

 

In addition, when consistent with the Fund's investment objective, the Fund will
employ various techniques to manage capital gain distributions. These techniques
include utilizing a share identification methodology whereby the Fund will
specifically identify each lot of shares of portfolio securities that it holds,
which will allow the Fund to sell first those specific shares with the highest
tax basis in order to reduce the amount of recognized capital gains as compared
with a sale of identical portfolio securities, if any, with a lower tax basis.
The Fund will sell first those shares with the highest tax basis only when it is
in the best interest of the Fund to do so, and reserves the right to sell other
shares when appropriate. In addition, the Fund may, at times, sell portfolio
securities in order to realize capital losses. Such capital losses would be used
to offset realized capital gains thereby reducing capital gain distributions.
Additionally, the Adviser will, consistent with the multi-factor valuation model
discussed above, employ a low portfolio turnover strategy designed to defer the
realization of capital gains.

 

Under normal conditions, the Adviser will attempt to invest as much of the
Fund's assets
 
(1) "Standard & Poor's 500" is a registered service mark of Standard & Poor's
    Corporation ("S&P").

 
                                                                               5
 
<PAGE>

as is practical and, in any event at least 65% of its total assets, in common
stocks which are included in the S&P 500 Index. The Fund is expected, however,
to maintain a position in high-quality short-term debt securities and money
market instruments to meet redemption requests. If the Adviser believes that
market conditions warrant a temporary defensive posture, the Fund may invest
without limitation in high-quality short-term debt securities and money market
instruments. These securities and money market instruments may include domestic
and foreign commercial paper, certificates of deposit, bankers' acceptances and
time deposits, U.S. Government obligations ("U.S. Government Obligations") and
repurchase agreements.

 

The Fund also may invest in certain specified derivative securities including:
exchange-traded options; over-the-counter options executed with primary dealers,
including long calls and puts and covered calls to enhance return; and U.S.
exchange-traded financial futures approved by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission ("CFTC") and options thereon for market exposure risk management. The
Fund may lend its portfolio securities to qualified institutional investors. The
Fund also may invest in restricted, private placement and other illiquid
securities. In addition, the Fund may invest in securities issued by other
investment companies, consistent with the Fund's investment objective and
policies.

 

NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND: In seeking to achieve its investment
objective, the Fund will invest in selected equity securities that are included
in the Standard & Poor's SmallCap 600 Index (the "S&P 600 Index")2. The S&P 600
Index is a capitalization weighted index consisting of 600 domestic stocks which
capture the economic and industry characteristics of small stock performance.
Most of these stocks are listed on either the New York, American or NASDAQ stock
exchanges.

 

Unlike traditional index funds, the Fund has a "managed" aspect. The Adviser
believes that a managed equity index portfolio can provide investors with
positive incremental performance relative to the S&P 600 Index while minimizing
the downside risk of underperforming the Index over time.

 

From the initial S&P 600 Index stock universe the Adviser ranks the
attractiveness of each security according to a multi-factor valuation model.
Both value and momentum factors are considered in the ranking process. Value
factors such as book value, earnings yield and cash flow measure a stock's
intrinsic worth versus its market price, while momentum characteristics such as
price momentum, earnings growth and earnings acceleration measure a stock
relative to others in the same industry. Each stock is assigned a ranking from 1
to 10 (best to worst). The Adviser then screens out the lower rated stocks
resulting in a portfolio of approximately 450-500 holdings that capture the
investment characteristics of the Index.

 
In addition, when consistent with the Fund's investment objective, the Fund will
employ various techniques to manage capital gain distributions. These techniques
include utilizing a share identification methodology whereby the Fund will
specifically identify each lot of shares of portfolio securities that it holds,
which will allow the Fund to sell first those specific shares with the highest
tax basis in order to reduce the amount of recognized capital gains as compared
with a sale of identical portfolio securities, if any, with a lower tax basis.
The Fund will sell first those shares with the highest tax basis only when it is
in the best interest of the Fund to do so, and reserves the right to sell other
shares when appropriate. In addition, the Fund may, at times, sell portfolio
securities in order to realize capital losses. Such capital losses would be used
to offset realized capital gains thereby reducing capital gain distributions.
Additionally, the Adviser will, consistent with the multi-factor valuation model
discussed above, employ a low portfolio turnover strategy designed to defer the
realization of capital gains.
 

Under normal conditions, substantially all of the Fund's assets, and, in any
event at least 65% of its total assets, will be invested in common stocks which
are included in the S&P 600 Index.
 
(2) "Standard & Poor's 600" is a registered service mark of S&P.

 
6
 
<PAGE>

The Fund is expected, however, to maintain a position in high-quality short-term
debt securities and money market instruments to meet redemption requests. If the
Adviser believes that market conditions warrant a temporary defensive posture,
the Fund may invest without limitation in high-quality short-term debt
securities and money market instruments. These securities and money market
instruments may include domestic and foreign commercial paper, certificates of
deposit, bankers' acceptances and time deposits, U.S. Government Obligations and
repurchase agreements.

 

The Fund also may invest in certain specified derivative securities including:
exchange-traded options; over-the-counter options executed with primary dealers,
including long calls and puts and covered calls to enhance return; and U.S.
exchange-traded financial futures approved by the CFTC and options thereon for
market exposure risk management. The Fund may lend its portfolio securities to
qualified institutional investors. The Fund also may invest in restricted,
private placement and other illiquid securities. In addition, the Fund may
invest in securities issued by other investment companies, consistent with the
Fund's investment objective and policies.

 

ABOUT THE INDEXES: The S&P 500 Index is composed of 500 common stocks, which are
chosen by S&P on a statistical basis to be included in the Index. The S&P
SmallCap 600 Index is composed of 600 domestic stocks, which are chosen by S&P
based on, among other things, market size, liquidity and industry group
representation. The S&P SmallCap 600 Index is designed to be a benchmark of
small capitalization stock performance.

 

The inclusion of a stock in the S&P 500 Index or the S&P SmallCap 600 Index in
no way implies that S&P believes the stock to be an attractive investment. The
Indexes are determined, composed and calculated by S&P without regard to the
Funds. S&P is neither a sponsor of, nor in any way affiliated with, the Funds,
and S&P makes no representation or warranty, expressed or implied, on the
advisability of investing in the Funds or as to the ability of the Indexes to
track general stock market performance. S&P disclaims all warranties of
merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose or use with respect to the
Indexes or any data included therein.

 

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER: Generally, the Funds will purchase portfolio securities for
capital appreciation or investment income, or both, and not for short-term
trading profits. While it is not possible to predict exactly annual portfolio
turnover rates, it is expected that under normal market conditions, the annual
portfolio turnover rate for each Fund will not exceed 25%.

 

RISK CONSIDERATIONS: Although the Adviser will seek to achieve the investment
objective of each Fund, there is no assurance that it will be able to do so. No
single fund should be considered, by itself, to provide a complete investment
program for any investor. Investments in a Fund are not insured against loss of
principal.

 

Investments by a Fund in common stocks and other equity securities are subject
to stock market risk. The value of the stocks that the Funds hold, like the
broader stock market, may decline over short or even extended periods.

 

Certain of the Funds' permissible investments may constitute derivative
securities, which are securities whose value is derived, at least in part, from
an underlying index or reference rate. There are certain types of derivative
securities that can, under certain circumstances, significantly increase a
purchaser's exposure to market or other risks. The Adviser, however, only
purchases derivative securities in circumstances where it believes such
purchases are consistent with a Fund's investment objective and do not unduly
increase the Fund's exposure to market or other risks. For additional risk
information regarding the Funds' investments in particular instruments, see
"Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities."

 
The techniques employed by the Adviser to seek to manage capital gain
distributions will generally only have the effect of deferring the realization
of capital gains. For example, to the extent that the capital gains recognized
on a sale of portfolio securities arise from the sale of specifically-identified
securities with higher tax bases, subsequent sales of the same portfolio
securities will be calculated by reference to the lower tax
 
                                                                               7
 
<PAGE>

basis securities that remain in the portfolio. Under this scenario, an investor
who purchases shares of a Fund after the first sale could receive capital gain
distributions that are higher than the distributions that would have been
received if this methodology had not been used. Therefore, certain investors
actually could be disadvantaged by the techniques employed by the Fund to seek
to manage capital gain distributions, depending on the timing of their purchase
of Fund shares. Even if there are no subsequent sales, upon a redemption or
exchange of Fund shares an investor will have to recognize gain to the extent
that the net asset value of Fund shares at such time exceeds such investor's tax
basis in his or her Fund shares.

 

The various techniques employed by the Funds to manage capital gain
distributions may result in the accumulation of substantial unrealized gains in
the Funds' portfolios. Moreover, the realization of capital gains is not
entirely within a Fund's control because it is at least partly dependent on
shareholder purchase and redemption activity. Capital gain distributions may
vary considerably from year-to-year.

 

INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS: Each Fund is subject to a number of investment
limitations. The following investment limitations are matters of fundamental
policy and may not be changed without the affirmative vote of the holders of a
majority of each Fund's outstanding shares. Other investment limitations that
cannot be changed without such a vote of shareholders are described in the SAI.


Each Fund may not:

 
1. Purchase any securities which would cause 25% or more of the value of the
Fund's total assets at the time of such purchase to be invested in the
securities of one or more issuers conducting their principal activities in the
same industry. (For purposes of this limitation, U.S. Government securities are
not considered members of any industry.)
 

2. Make loans, except that a Fund may purchase and hold debt instruments
(whether such instruments are part of a public offering or privately placed),
may enter into repurchase agreements and may lend portfolio securities in
accordance with its investment policies.

 

3. Purchase securities of any one issuer (other than securities issued or
guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities) if,
immediately after such purchase, more than 5% of the value of such Fund's total
assets would be invested in the securities of such issuer, except that up to 25%
of the value of the Fund's total assets may be invested without regard to these
limitations and with respect to 75% of such Fund's assets, the Fund will not
hold more than 10% of the voting securities of any issuer.

 

The investment objective and policies of each Fund, unless otherwise specified,
may be changed without a vote of the Fund's shareholders. If the investment
objective or policies of a Fund change, shareholders should consider whether the
Fund remains an appropriate investment in light of their then current position
and needs.

 
   How Performance Is Shown
 

From time to time the Funds may advertise the total return and yield on a class
of shares. BOTH TOTAL RETURN AND YIELD FIGURES ARE BASED ON HISTORICAL DATA AND
ARE NOT INTENDED TO INDICATE FUTURE PERFORMANCE. The "total return" of a class
of shares of a Fund may be calculated on an average annual total return basis or
an aggregate total return basis. Average annual total return refers to the
average annual compounded rates of return on a class of shares over one-, five-,
and ten-year periods or the life of a Fund (as stated in the advertisement) that
would equate an initial amount invested at the beginning of a stated period to
the ending redeemable value of the investment, assuming the reinvestment of all
dividend and capital gain distributions. Aggregate total return reflects the
total percentage change in the value of the investment over the

 
8
 
<PAGE>
measuring period, again assuming the reinvestment of all dividends and capital
gain distributions. Total return may also be presented for other periods.
 

"Yield" is calculated by dividing the annualized net investment income per share
during a recent 30-day (or one month) period of a class of shares of a Fund by
the maximum public offering price per share on the last day of that period.


Set forth below is certain performance data for the Enhanced Equity Index Common
Trust Fund and Enhanced Small Cap Equity Index Common Trust Fund (the "CTFs"),
each of which is currently managed on behalf of NationsBank by TradeStreet.
(Prior to the formation of TradeStreet in 1995, the CTFs were managed solely by
NationsBank.) The performance data for the CTFs is deemed relevant because the
Enhanced Equity Index and Enhanced Small Cap Equity Index Common Trust Funds
have investment objectives and policies that are substantially similar to those
of Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund,
respectively. Moreover, the portfolio manager of TradeStreet (who currently
manages the CTFs and the Funds) employs the same quantitative investment process
for the Funds that has, and continues to be, utilized for the CTFs. THIS
PERFORMANCE DATA REPRESENTS PAST PERFORMANCE OF THE CTFS AND IS NOT NECESSARILY
INDICATIVE OF THE FUTURE PERFORMANCE OF THE CTFS OR THE FUNDS.

 

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS FOR THE
PERIODS INDICATED THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 1996*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                        Since
                     One        Three        Five     Inception
                     Year        Year        Year     (12/31/88)**
<S>               <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
Enhanced Equity
  Index Common
  Trust Fund        19.78%      16.91%      14.90%      16.03%
S&P 500 Index       20.33%      17.40%      15.21%      15.79%
Lipper Equity+
  Index Funds
  Average           19.77%      16.90%      14.70%      15.18%
</TABLE>

 

ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                     Enhanced                     Lipper
                   Equity Index                Equity Index
                   Common Trust      S&P          Funds
Year                   Fund       500 Index      Average+
<S>                <C>           <C>           <C>
1989                  34.12%        31.55%        30.58%
1990                  -1.52%        -3.15%        -3.57%
1991                  31.72%        30.56%        29.65%
1992                   5.52%         7.64%         7.12%
1993                  10.47%         9.99%         9.52%
1994                   0.69%         1.31%         0.90%
1995                  37.66%        37.45%        36.82%
</TABLE>

 

TOTAL RETURNS FOR THE PERIODS INDICATED
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 1996*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                   Since
                                    Year-To-     Inception
                    Three Month       Date       (10/1/95)
<S>                 <C>           <C>           <C>
Enhanced Small Cap
  Equity Index
  Common Trust
  Fund                 4.35%         16.33%        17.25%
S&P 600 Index          3.21%         14.79%        15.31%
</TABLE>

 

 * The total returns above reflect the deduction of 0.50% of fees and expenses
   per annum. The CTFs are not subject to certain investment limitations,
   diversification requirements, and other restrictions imposed by the 1940 Act
   and the Internal Revenue Code, which if applicable, may have adversely
   affected the performance results of the CTFs.

 

** Prior to 12/31/88 the Enhanced Equity Index Common Trust Fund was managed
   with a different objective and policies and therefore performance prior
   thereto is not included in the prior performance calculations.

 

 + The Lipper Equity Index Funds Average represents the average performance of
   mutual funds with similar objectives monitored by Lipper Analytical Services,
   Inc. during the periods shown.

 

Investment performance, which will vary, is based on many factors, including
market conditions, the composition of a Fund's portfolio and a Fund's operating
expenses. Investment performance also often reflects the risks associated with
such Fund's investment objective and policies. These factors should be
considered when comparing a Fund's investment results to those of other mutual
funds and other investment vehicles. Since yields fluctuate, yield data cannot
necessarily be used to compare an investment in a Fund with bank deposits,
savings accounts,

 
                                                                               9
 
<PAGE>
and similar investment alternatives which often provide an agreed-upon or
guaranteed fixed yield for a stated period of time.
 

In addition to Investor A Shares, the Funds offer Primary A, Primary B and
Investor C Shares. Each class of shares may bear different sales charges,
shareholder servicing fees and other expenses, which may cause the performance
of a class to differ from the performance of the other classes. Total return and
yield quotations will be computed separately for each class of the Funds'
shares. Any fees charged by a selling agent and/or servicing agent directly to
its customers' accounts in connection with investments in the Funds will not be
included in calculations of total return or yield. Each Fund's annual report
contains additional performance information and is available upon request
without charge from the Funds' distributor or your Agent (as defined below).

 

   How The Funds Are Managed

 
The business and affairs of Nations Fund Trust are managed under the direction
of its Board of Trustees. Nations Fund Trust's SAI contains the names of and
general background information concerning each Trustee of Nations Fund Trust.
 
Nations Fund and the Adviser have adopted codes of ethics which contain policies
on personal securities transactions by "access persons," including portfolio
managers and investment analysts. These policies substantially comply in all
material respects with the recommendations set forth in the May 9, 1994 Report
of the Advisory Group on Personal Investing of the Investment Company Institute.
 

INVESTMENT ADVISER: NationsBanc Advisors, Inc. serves as investment adviser to
the Funds. NBAI is a wholly owned subsidiary of NationsBank, which in turn is a
wholly owned banking subsidiary of NationsBank Corporation, a bank holding
company organized as a North Carolina corporation. NBAI has its principal
offices at One NationsBank Plaza, Charlotte, North Carolina 28255.


TradeStreet Investment Associates, Inc., with principal offices at One
NationsBank Plaza, Charlotte, North Carolina 28255, serves as investment
sub-adviser to the Funds. TradeStreet is a wholly owned subsidiary of
NationsBank. TradeStreet provides investment management services to individuals,
corporations and institutions.

 

Subject to the general supervision of Nations Fund Trust's Board of Trustees,
and in accordance with each Fund's investment policies, the Adviser formulates
guidelines and lists of approved investments for each Fund, makes decisions with
respect to and places orders for each Fund's purchases and sales of portfolio
securities and maintains records relating to such purchases and sales. The
Adviser is authorized to allocate purchase and sale orders for portfolio
securities to certain financial institutions, including, in the case of agency
transactions, financial institutions which are affiliated with the Adviser or
which have sold shares in such Funds, if the Adviser believes that the quality
of the transaction and the commission are comparable to what they would be with
other qualified brokerage firms. From time to time, to the extent consistent
with its investment objective, policies and restrictions, each Fund may invest
in securities of companies with which NationsBank has a lending relationship.
For the services provided and expenses assumed pursuant to an Investment
Advisory Agreement, NBAI is entitled to receive an advisory fee, computed daily
and paid monthly, at the annual rate of 0.50% of the average daily net assets of
each Fund.

 

From time to time, NBAI (and/or TradeStreet) may waive or reimburse (either
voluntarily or pursuant to applicable state limitations) advisory fees and/or
expenses payable by a Fund.

 
For the services provided and the expenses assumed pursuant to a Sub-Advisory
Agreement, NBAI will pay TradeStreet sub-advisory fees, computed daily and paid
monthly, at the annual
 
10
 
<PAGE>

rate of 0.10% of the average daily net assets of each Fund.

 
Greg W. Golden is a Structured Products Manager, Equity Management for
TradeStreet and is Portfolio Manager for Nations Equity Index Fund, Nations
Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund. He has been
Portfolio Manager for Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund since its inception.
Prior to assuming his position with TradeStreet in 1996, he was Vice President
and Structured Products Manager for the Investment Management Group at
NationsBank. He has worked in the investment community since 1990. His past
experience includes portfolio management, derivatives management and
quantitative analysis for the Investment Management Group at NationsBank and
Sovran Bank of Tennessee. Mr. Golden received a B.B.A. in Finance from Belmont
University. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst candidate and a member of the
Association for Investment Management and Research as well as the North Carolina
Society of Financial Analysts, Inc.
 
Morrison & Foerster LLP, counsel to Nations Fund and special counsel to
NationsBank, has advised Nations Fund and NationsBank that NationsBank and its
affiliates may perform the services contemplated by the Investment Advisory
Agreement and this Prospectus without violation of the Glass-Steagall Act. Such
counsel has pointed out, however, that there are no controlling judicial or
administrative interpretations or decisions and that future judicial or
administrative interpretations of, or decisions relating to, present federal or
state statutes, including the Glass-Steagall Act, and regulations relating to
the permissible activities of banks and their subsidiaries or affiliates, as
well as future changes in federal or state statutes, including the
Glass-Steagall Act, and regulations and judicial or administrative decisions or
interpretations thereof, could prevent such entities from continuing to perform,
in whole or in part, such services. If any such entity were prohibited from
performing any of such services, it is expected that new agreements would be
proposed or entered into with another entity or entities qualified to perform
such services.
 

OTHER SERVICE PROVIDERS: Stephens Inc. ("Stephens"), with principal offices at
111 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201, serves as the administrator of
Nations Fund pursuant to an Administration Agreement. Pursuant to the terms of
the Administration Agreement, Stephens provides various administrative and
corporate secretarial services to the Funds, including providing general
oversight of other service providers, office space, utilities and various legal
and administrative services in connection with the satisfaction of various
regulatory requirements applicable to the Funds.

 

First Data Investor Services Group, Inc. ("First Data"), formerly The
Shareholder Services Group, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of First Data
Corporation, with principal offices at One Exchange Place, Boston, Massachusetts
02109, serves as the co-administrator of Nations Fund pursuant to a
Co-Administration Agreement. Under the Co-Administration Agreement, First Data
provides various administrative and accounting services to the Funds including
performing the calculations necessary to determine the net asset value per share
and dividends of each class of shares of the Funds, preparing tax returns and
financial statements and maintaining the portfolio records and certain of the
general accounting records for the Funds.

 

For the services rendered pursuant to the Administration and Co-Administration
Agreements, Stephens and First Data are entitled to receive a combined fee at an
annual rate of up to 0.10% of each Fund's average daily net assets.

 

NationsBank serves as sub-administrator for Nations Fund pursuant to a
Sub-Administration Agreement. Pursuant to the terms of the Sub-Administration
Agreement, NationsBank assists Stephens in supervising, coordinating and
monitoring various aspects of the Funds' administrative operations. For
providing such services NationsBank shall be entitled to receive a monthly fee
from Stephens based on an annual rate of 0.01% of the Funds' average daily net
assets.

 

Shares of the Funds are sold on a continuous basis by Stephens, as the Funds'
sponsor and distributor. Stephens is a registered bro-

 

                                                                              11
 
<PAGE>

ker/dealer with principal offices at 111 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas
72201. Nations Fund has entered into a distribution agreement with Stephens
which provides that Stephens has the exclusive right to distribute shares of the
Funds. Stephens may pay service fees or commissions to selling agents that
assist customers in purchasing Investor A Shares of the Funds. See "Shareholder
Servicing And Distribution Plan."

 

NationsBank of Texas, N.A. (the "Custodian") serves as custodian for the Funds.
The Custodian is located at 1401 Elm Street, Dallas, Texas 75202 and is a wholly
owned subsidiary of NationsBank Corporation. In return for providing custodial
services, the Custodian is entitled to receive, in addition to out-of-pocket
expenses, fees payable monthly (i) at the rate of 1.25% of 1% of the average
daily net assets of each Fund, (ii) $10.00 per repurchase collateral transaction
by such Fund, and (iii) $15.00 per purchase, sale and maturity transaction
involving such Fund.

 

First Data serves as transfer agent (the "Transfer Agent") for the Funds'
Investor A Shares. The Transfer Agent is located at One Exchange Place, Boston,
Massachusetts 02109.

 
Price Waterhouse LLP serves as independent accountant to Nations Fund. Its
address is 160 Federal Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110.
 

EXPENSES: The accrued expenses of each Fund, as well as certain expenses
attributable to Investor A Shares, are deducted from accrued income before
dividends are declared. The Funds' expenses include, but are not limited to:
fees paid to the Adviser, NationsBank, Stephens and First Data; interest;
trustees' fees; federal and state securities registration and qualification
fees; brokerage fees and commissions; costs of preparing and printing
prospectuses for regulatory purposes and for distribution to existing
shareholders; charges of the Custodian and Transfer Agent; certain insurance
premiums; outside auditing and legal expenses; costs of shareholder reports and
shareholder meetings; other expenses which are not expressly assumed by the
Adviser, NationsBank, Stephens or First Data under their respective agreements
with Nations Fund; and any extraordinary expenses. Investor A Shares bear
certain class specific retail transfer agency expenses and also bear certain
additional shareholder service and/or sales support costs. Any general expenses
of Nations Fund Trust that are not readily identifiable as belonging to a
particular investment portfolio are allocated among all portfolios in the
proportion that the assets of a portfolio bears to the assets of Nations Fund
Trust or in such other manner as the Board of Trustees deems appropriate.

 
   Organization And History
 

The Funds are members of the Nations Fund Family, which consists of Nations Fund
Trust, Nations Fund, Inc., Nations Fund Portfolios, Inc. and Nations
Institutional Reserves. The Nations Fund Family currently consists of more than
43 distinct investment portfolios and total assets in excess of $18 billion.

 

NATIONS FUND TRUST: Nations Fund Trust was organized as a Massachusetts business
trust on May 6, 1985. Nations Fund Trust's fiscal year end is March 31; prior to
1996, Nations Fund Trust's fiscal year end was November 30. The Funds currently
offer four classes of shares -- Primary A Shares, Primary B Shares, Investor A
Shares and Investor C Shares. This Prospectus relates only to the Investor A
Shares of Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund. To
obtain additional information regarding the Funds' other classes of shares which
may be available to you, contact your Agent (as defined below) or Nations Fund
at 1-800-321-7854.

 
Each share of Nations Fund Trust is without par value, represents an equal
proportionate interest in the related fund with other shares of the same class,
and is entitled to such dividends and distributions out of the income earned on
the assets belonging to such fund as are declared in the dis-
 

12
 
<PAGE>
cretion of Nations Fund Trust's Board of Trustees. Nations Fund Trust's
Declaration of Trust authorizes the Board of Trustees to classify or reclassify
any class of shares into one or more series of shares.
 
Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each full share held and a
proportionate fractional vote for each fractional share held. Shareholders of
each fund of Nations Fund Trust will vote in the aggregate and not by fund, and
shareholders of each fund will vote in the aggregate and not by class except as
otherwise expressly required by law or when the Board of Trustees determines
that the matter to be voted on affects only the interests of shareholders of a
particular fund or class. See Nations Fund Trust's SAI for examples of when the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act") requires voting by fund.
 

As of October 15, 1996, NationsBank and its affiliates possessed or shared power
to dispose or vote with respect to more than 25% of the outstanding shares of
certain classes of shares of Nations Fund Trust and therefore could be
considered to be a controlling person of these classes and series of Nations
Fund Trust for purposes of the 1940 Act. For more detailed information
concerning the percentage of each class or series of shares over which
NationsBank and its affiliates possessed or shared power to dispose or vote as
of a certain date, see Nations Fund Trust's SAI.

 
Nations Fund Trust does not presently intend to hold annual meetings except as
required by the 1940 Act. Shareholders will have the right to remove Trustees.
Nations Fund Trust's Code of Regulations provides that special meetings of
shareholders shall be called at the written request of the shareholders entitled
to vote at least 10% of the outstanding shares of Nations Fund Trust entitled to
be voted at such meeting.
 
About Your Investment
 
   How To Buy Shares
 

The Funds have established various procedures for purchasing Investor A Shares
in order to accommodate different investors. Purchase orders for Investor A
Shares may be placed directly with a Fund or through banks, broker/dealers or
other financial institutions (including certain affiliates of NationsBank) that
have entered into a shareholder servicing agreement ("Servicing Agreement") with
Nations Fund ("Servicing Agents") and/or a sales support agreement ("Sales
Support Agreement") with Stephens ("Selling Agents"). Servicing Agents and
Selling Agents are sometimes referred to hereafter as "Agents."

 
In addition, Investor A Shares may be purchased through a Nations Fund Personal
Investment Planner account, which is a managed agency/asset allocation account
established with NBAI (an "Account"). Investments through an Account are
governed by the terms and conditions of the Account, which are set forth in the
Client Agreement and Disclosure Statement provided by NBAI to each investor who
establishes an Account. Because of the nature of the Account, certain of the
features described in this Prospectus are not available to investors purchasing
Investor A Shares through an Account. Potential investors through an Account
should refer to the Client Agreement and Disclosure Statement for more
information regarding the Account, including information regarding the fees and
expenses charged in connection with an Account.
 

There is a minimum initial investment of $1,000 in each Fund, except that the
minimum initial investment is:

 
(Bullet) $500 for IRA investors;
 
(Bullet) $250 for non-working spousal IRAs; and
 
                                                                              13
 
<PAGE>
(Bullet) $100 for investors participating on a monthly basis in the Systematic
         Investment Plan described below.
 
There is no minimum investment amount for investments by 401(k) plans,
simplified employee pension plans ("SEPs"), salary reduction-simplified employee
pension plans ("SAR-SEPs") or salary reduction-Individual Retirement Accounts
("SAR-IRAs"). However, the assets of such plans must reach an asset value of
$1,000 ($500 for SEPs, SAR-SEPs and SAR-IRAs) within one year of the account
open date. If the assets of such plans do not reach the minimum asset size
within one year, Nations Fund reserves the right to redeem the shares held by
such plans on 60 days' written notice. The minimum subsequent investment is
$100, except for investments pursuant to the Systematic Investment Plan
described below.
 
Investor A Shares are purchased at net asset value per share. Purchases may be
effected on days on which the New York Stock Exchange (the "Exchange") is open
for business (a "Business Day").
 

Nations Fund and Stephens reserve the right to reject any purchase order. The
issuance of Investor A Shares is recorded on the books of the Funds, and share
certificates are not issued unless expressly requested in writing. Certificates
are not issued for fractional shares.

 

OPENING AN ACCOUNT DIRECTLY WITH THE FUND: Investors may open a regular
(non-retirement) account directly with a Fund, either by mail or by wire.

 

BY MAIL: Investors should complete a New Account Application and forward it,
along with a check made payable to the respective Fund, to:

 
Nations Fund
P.O. Box 34602
Charlotte, NC 28254-4602
 
BY WIRE: Investors should call Investor Services at 1-800-982-2271 for an
account number and use the following wire instructions:
 
Nations Fund
c/o Boston Safe Deposit & Trust
ABA #011001234
DDA #154202
Account Name
Account Number
Fund Name
 
Investors should complete a New Account Application and mail it to the address
above.
 
RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS: For IRAs and other retirement accounts, investors should
call Investor Services at 1-800-982-2271.
 

ADDITIONAL PURCHASES: Additional purchases may be made by mail or wire. To
purchase additional shares by mail, send a check made payable to the respective
Fund with a reinvestment slip to the address set forth above. To purchase
additional shares by wire, follow the wiring instructions set forth above.

 

EFFECTIVE TIME OF PURCHASES: Purchase orders for Investor A Shares in the Funds
which are received by Stephens or by the Transfer Agent before the close of
regular trading hours on the Exchange (currently 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) on any
Business Day are priced according to the net asset value determined on that day
but are not executed until 4:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the Business Day on which
immediately available funds in payment of the purchase price are received by the
Funds' Custodian. Such payment must be received no later than 4:00 p.m., Eastern
time, by the third Business Day following receipt of the order. If funds are not
received by such date, the order will not be accepted and notice thereof will be
given to the Agent placing the order. Payment for orders which are not received
or accepted will be returned after prompt inquiry to the sending Agent.

 
The Agents are responsible for transmitting orders for purchases of Investor A
Shares by their customers ("Customers"), and delivering required funds, on a
timely basis. Stephens is responsible for transmitting orders it receives to
Nations Fund.
 

SYSTEMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN: Under the Funds' Systematic Investment Plan ("SIP")
a

 
14
 
<PAGE>
shareholder may automatically purchase Investor A Shares. On a bi-monthly,
monthly or quarterly basis, a shareholder may direct cash to be transferred
automatically from his/her checking or savings account at any bank which is a
member of the Automated Clearing House to his/her Fund account. Transfers will
occur on or about the 15th and/or 30th day of the applicable month. The
systematic investment amount may be in any amount from $25 to $100,000. For more
information concerning the SIP, contact your Agent or Investor Services.
 
TELEPHONE TRANSACTIONS: Investors may effect purchases, redemptions (up to
$50,000) and exchanges by telephone. See "How To Redeem Shares" and "How To
Exchange Shares" below. Shareholders should be aware that by using the telephone
transaction feature, such shareholders may be giving up a measure of security
that they may have if they were to authorize written requests only. A
shareholder may bear the risk of any resulting losses from a telephone
transaction. Nations Fund will employ reasonable procedures to confirm that
instructions communicated by telephone are genuine, and if Nations Fund and its
service providers fail to employ such measures, they may be liable for any
losses due to unauthorized or fraudulent instructions. Nations Fund requires a
form of personal identification prior to acting upon instructions received by
telephone and provides written confirmation to shareholders of each telephone
share transaction. In addition, Nations Fund reserves the right to record all
telephone conversations.
 
   How To Redeem Shares
 

For shareholders who open and maintain an account directly with a Fund,
redemption orders should be communicated to such Fund by calling Investor
Services at 1-800-982-2271 or in writing. (Shareholders must have established
telephone features on their account in order to effect telephone transactions.)
Redemption proceeds are normally sent by mail or wired within three Business
Days after receipt of the order by a Fund. For shareholders who purchased their
shares through an Agent, redemption orders should be transmitted by telephone or
in writing through the same Agent. Redemption proceeds are normally wired to the
redeeming Agent within three Business Days after receipt of the order by
Stephens or by the Transfer Agent. Redemption orders are effected at the net
asset value per share next determined after receipt of the order by a Fund,
Stephens, or the Transfer Agent, as the case may be. The Agents are responsible
for transmitting redemption orders to Stephens or to the Transfer Agent and for
crediting their Customer's account with the redemption proceeds on a timely
basis. Redemption proceeds for shares purchased by check may not be remitted
until at least 15 days after the date of purchase to ensure that the check has
cleared; a certified check, however, is deemed to be cleared immediately. No
charge for wiring redemption payments is imposed by Nations Fund. There is no
redemption charge.

 

Nations Fund may redeem a shareholder's Investor A Shares upon 60 days' written
notice if the balance in the shareholder's account drops below $500 as a result
of redemptions. Share balances also may be redeemed at the direction of an Agent
pursuant to arrangements between the Agent and its Customers. Nations Fund also
may redeem shares of the Funds involuntarily or make payment for redemption in
readily marketable securities or other property under certain circumstances in
accordance with the 1940 Act.

 
Prior to effecting a redemption of Investor A Shares represented by
certificates, the Transfer Agent must have received such certificates at its
principal office. All such certificates must be endorsed by the redeeming
shareholder or accompanied by a signed stock power, in each instance with the
signature guaranteed by a commercial bank or a member of a major stock exchange,
unless other arrangements satisfactory to Nations Fund have previously been
made. Nations Fund may require any additional
 
                                                                              15
 
<PAGE>
information reasonably necessary to evidence that a redemption has been duly
authorized.
 

AUTOMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN: An Automatic Withdrawal Plan ("AWP") may be
established by a new or existing shareholder of the Funds if the value of the
Investor A Shares in his/her accounts within the Nations Fund Family (valued at
the net asset value at the time of the establishment of the AWP) equals $10,000
or more. Shareholders who elect to establish an AWP may receive a monthly,
quarterly or annual check or automatic transfer to a checking or savings account
in a stated amount of not less than $25 on or about the 10th or 25th day of the
applicable month of withdrawal. Investor A Shares will be redeemed as necessary
to meet withdrawal payments. Withdrawals will reduce principal and may
eventually deplete the shareholder's account. If a shareholder desires to
establish an AWP after opening an account, a signature guarantee will be
required. An AWP may be terminated by a shareholder on 30 days' written notice
to his/her Agent or by Nations Fund at any time.

 
   How To Exchange Shares
 
GENERAL: The exchange feature enables a shareholder of a fund of Nations Fund to
acquire shares of the same class that are offered by any other fund of Nations
Fund when the shareholder believes that a shift between funds is an appropriate
investment decision. A qualifying exchange is based on the next calculated net
asset value per share of each fund after the exchange order is received.
 

For shareholders who maintain an account directly with a Fund, exchange requests
should be communicated to such Fund by calling Investor Services at
1-800-982-2271 or in writing. For shareholders who purchased their shares
through an Agent, exchange requests should be communicated to the Agent, who is
responsible for transmitting the request to Stephens or to the Transfer Agent.

 

The Funds and each of the other funds of Nations Fund may limit the number of
times this exchange feature may be exercised by a shareholder within a specified
period of time. Also, the exchange feature may be terminated or revised at any
time by Nations Fund upon such notice as may be required by applicable
regulatory agencies (presently 60 days for termination or material revision),
absent unusual circumstances.

 
The current prospectus for each fund of Nations Fund describes its investment
objective and policies, and shareholders should obtain a copy and examine it
carefully before investing. Exchanges are subject to the minimum investment
requirement and any other conditions imposed by each fund. In the case of any
shareholder holding a share certificate or certificates, no exchanges may be
made until all applicable share certificates have been received by the Transfer
Agent and deposited in the shareholder's account. An exchange will be treated
for Federal income tax purposes the same as a redemption of shares, on which the
shareholder may realize a capital gain or loss. And, the ability to deduct
capital losses on an exchange may be limited in situations where there is an
exchange of shares within 90 days after the shares are purchased.
 
The Investor A Shares exchanged must have a current value of at least $1,000
(except for exchanges through the Automatic Exchange Feature, which is described
below). Nations Fund reserves the right to reject any exchange request. Only
shares that may legally be sold in the state of the shareholder's residence may
be acquired in an exchange. Only shares of a class that is accepting investments
generally may be acquired in an exchange. During periods of significant economic
or market change, telephone exchanges may be difficult to complete. In such
event, shareholders should consider communicating their exchange requests by
mail.
 

Investor A Shares of the Funds are offered without any Contingent Deferred Sales
Charge ("CDSC"). However, Investor A Shares of other funds within the Nations
Fund Family may have been sold subject to a CDSC. If a shareholder

 
16
 
<PAGE>
exchanges any such shares (the "Exchanged Shares") for Investor A Shares of the
Fund, the shares of the Fund will be subject to the CDSC. The holding period of
such Investor A Shares (for purposes of determining whether a CDSC is applicable
upon redemption) will be computed from the time of the original purchase of the
Exchanged Shares (or, if the Exchanged Shares were acquired in an exchange, from
the time of the original purchase of Investor A Shares).
 

AUTOMATIC EXCHANGE FEATURE: Under the Funds' Automatic Exchange Feature ("AEF")
a shareholder may automatically exchange at least $25 on a monthly or quarterly
basis. A shareholder may direct proceeds to be exchanged from one fund of
Nations Fund to another as allowed by the applicable exchange rules within the
Prospectus. Exchanges will occur on or about the 15th or 30th day of the
applicable month. The shareholder must have an existing position in both Funds
in order to establish the AEF. This feature may be established by directing a
request to the Transfer Agent by telephone or in writing. For additional
information, a shareholder should contact his/her Selling Agent or Investor
Services.

 
   Shareholder Servicing And Distribution
   Plan
 

The Funds' Shareholder Servicing and Distribution Plan (the "Investor A Plan"),
adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act, permits the Funds to
compensate (i) Servicing Agents and Selling Agents for services provided to
their Customers that own Investor A Shares and (ii) Stephens for
distribution-related expenses incurred in connection with Investor A Shares.
Aggregate payments under the Investor A Plan are calculated daily and paid
monthly at a rate or rates set from time to time by the Funds, provided that the
annual rate may not exceed 0.25% of the average daily net asset value of the
Investor A Shares of the Funds.

 

The fees payable to Servicing Agents under the Investor A Plan are used
primarily to compensate or reimburse Servicing Agents for shareholder services
provided, and related expenses incurred, by such Servicing Agents. The
shareholder services provided by Servicing Agents may include: (i) aggregating
and processing purchase and redemption requests for Investor A Shares from
Customers and transmitting net purchase and redemption orders to Stephens or the
Transfer Agent; (ii) providing Customers with a service that invests the assets
of their accounts in Investor A Shares pursuant to specific or preauthorized
instructions; (iii) processing dividend and distribution payments from the Funds
on behalf of Customers; (iv) providing information periodically to Customers
showing their positions in Investor A Shares; (v) arranging for bank wires; and
(vi) providing general shareholder liaison services. The fees payable to Selling
Agents are used primarily to compensate or reimburse Selling Agents for
providing sales support assistance in connection with the sale of Investor A
Shares to Customers, which may include forwarding sales literature and
advertising provided by Nations Fund to Customers.

 
The fees under the Investor A Plan also may be used to reimburse Stephens for
distribution-related expenses actually incurred by Stephens, including, but not
limited to, expenses of organizing and conducting sales seminars, printing
prospectuses and statements of additional information (and supplements thereto)
and reports for other than existing shareholders, preparation and distribution
of advertising and sales literature and the costs of administering the Investor
A Plan.
 

Stephens may, from time to time, at its expense or as an expense for which it
may be reimbursed under the Investor A Plan, pay a bonus or other consideration
or incentive to Agents who sell a minimum dollar amount of shares of the Funds
during a specified period of time. Stephens also may, from time to time, pay
additional consideration to Agents not to exceed 1.00% of the offer-


 
                                                                              17
 
<PAGE>
ing price per share on all sales of Investor A Shares as an expense of Stephens
or for which Stephens may be reimbursed under the Investor A Plan. Any such
additional consideration or incentive program may be terminated at any time by
Stephens.
 

In addition, Stephens has established a non-cash compensation program, pursuant
to which broker/dealers or financial institutions that sell shares of the Funds
may earn additional compensation in the form of trips to sales seminars or
vacation destinations, tickets to sporting events, theater or other
entertainment, opportunities to participate in golf or other outings and gift
certificates for meals or merchandise. This non-cash compensation program may be
amended or terminated at any time by Stephens.

 
Nations Fund and Stephens may suspend or reduce payments under the Investor A
Plan at any time, and payments are subject to the continuation of the Investor A
Plan described above and the terms of the Servicing Agreement and Sales Support
Agreement. See the SAI for more details on the Investor A Plan.
 
Nations Fund understands that Agents may charge fees to their Customers who are
the owners of Investor A Shares for various services provided in connection with
a Customer's account. These fees would be in addition to any amounts received by
a Selling Agent under its Sales Support Agreement with Stephens or by a
Servicing Agent under its Servicing Agreement with Nations Fund. The Sales
Support Agreement and Servicing Agreement require Agents to disclose to their
Customers any compensation payable to the Agent by Stephens or Nations Fund and
any other compensation payable by the Customers for various services provided in
connection with their accounts. Customers should read this Prospectus in light
of the terms governing their accounts with their Agents.
 

   How The Funds Value Their Shares

 

The Funds calculate the net asset value of a share of each class by dividing the
total value of its assets, less liabilities, by the number of shares in the
class outstanding. Shares are valued as of the close of regular trading on the
Exchange (currently 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) on each Business Day. Currently,
the days on which the Exchange is closed (other than weekends) are: New Year's
Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day (observed), Independence Day,
Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day.

 
Portfolio securities for which market quotations are readily available are
valued at market value. Short-term investments that will mature in 60 days or
less are valued at amortized cost, which approximates market value. All other
securities and assets are valued at their fair value following procedures
approved by the Trustees.
 
   How Dividends And Distributions Are
   Made; Tax Information
 

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Even though the Funds seek to manage taxable
distributions, the Funds may be expected to earn and distribute taxable income
and may also be expected to realize and distribute capital gains from time to
time. Dividends from net investment income are declared and paid each calendar
quarter by the Funds. The Funds' net realized capital gains (including net
short-term capital gains) are distributed at least annually.

 

Investor A Shares of the Funds are eligible to receive dividends when declared,
provided how-


 
18
 
<PAGE>
ever, that the purchase order for such shares is received at least one day prior
to the dividend declaration and such shares continue to be eligible for
dividends through and including the day before the redemption order is executed.
 
The net asset value of Investor A Shares will be reduced by the amount of any
dividend or distribution. Certain Agents may provide for the reinvestment of
dividends in the form of additional Investor A Shares of the same class in the
same Fund. Dividends and distributions are paid in cash within five Business
Days of the end of the quarter to which the dividend relates. Dividends and
distributions payable to a shareholder are paid in cash within five Business
Days after a shareholder's complete redemption of his/her Investor A Shares.
 

TAX INFORMATION: Each Fund intends to qualify as a "regulated investment
company" under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"). Such
qualification relieves the Fund of liability for Federal income tax on amounts
distributed in accordance with the Code.

 

Each Fund intends to distribute substantially all of its investment company
taxable income and net tax-exempt income each taxable year. Distributions by a
Fund of its net investment income and the excess, if any, of its net short-term
capital gain over its net long-term capital loss are taxable as ordinary income
to shareholders who are not currently exempt from Federal income tax, whether
such income is received in cash or reinvested in additional shares.

 

Corporate investors in a Fund may be entitled to the dividends received
deduction on all or a portion of such Fund's dividends.

 

Substantially all of the Funds' net realized long-term capital gains will be
distributed at least annually. The Funds will generally have no tax liability
with respect to such gains, and the distributions will be taxable to
shareholders who are not exempt from Federal income tax as long-term capital
gains, regardless of how long the shareholders have held such Funds' shares and
whether such gains are received in cash or reinvested in additional shares.

 
Each year, shareholders will be notified as to the amount and Federal tax status
of all dividends and capital gains paid during the prior year. Such dividends
and capital gains may be subject to state and local taxes.
 

Dividends declared in October, November, or December of any year payable to
shareholders of record on a specified date in such months will be deemed to have
been received by shareholders and paid by a Fund on December 31 of such year in
the event such dividends are actually paid during January of the following year.

 

Federal law requires Nations Fund to withhold 31% from any dividends (other than
exempt-interest dividends) paid by Nations Fund and/or redemptions (including
exchange redemptions) that occur in certain shareholder accounts if the
shareholder has not properly furnished a certified correct Taxpayer
Identification Number or has not certified that withholding does not apply, or
if the Internal Revenue Service has notified Nations Fund that the Taxpayer
Identification Number listed on a shareholder account is incorrect according to
its records, or that the shareholder is subject to backup withholding. Amounts
withheld are applied to the shareholder's Federal tax liability, and a refund
may be obtained from the Internal Revenue Service if withholding results in
overpayment of taxes. Federal law also requires the Funds to withhold 30% or the
applicable tax treaty rate from dividends paid to certain nonresident alien,
non-U.S. partnership and non-U.S. corporation shareholder accounts.

 

The foregoing discussion is based on tax laws and regulations which were in
effect as of the date of this Prospectus and summarizes only some of the
important Federal tax considerations generally affecting the Funds and their
shareholders. It is not intended as a substitute for careful tax planning;
investors should consult their tax advisors with respect to their specific tax
situations as well as with respect to state and local taxes. Further tax
information is contained in the SAI.

 
                                                                              19
 
<PAGE>
   Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities
 

The following are summary descriptions of certain types of instruments in which
a Fund may invest. The "How Objectives Are Pursued" section of the Prospectus
identifies each Fund's permissible investments, and the SAI contains more
information concerning such investments.

 

BANK INSTRUMENTS: Bank instruments consist mainly of certificates of deposit,
time deposits and bankers' acceptances. The Funds will limit their investments
in bank obligations so they do not exceed 25% of each Fund's total assets at the
time of purchase.

 

BORROWINGS: When a Fund borrows money, the net asset value of a share may be
subject to greater fluctuation until the borrowing is paid off. The Funds may
borrow money from banks for temporary purposes in amounts of up to one-third of
their respective total assets, provided that borrowings in excess of 5% of the
value of a Fund's total assets must be repaid prior to the purchase of portfolio
securities. Under the requirements of the 1940 Act, the Funds are required to
maintain an asset coverage (including the proceeds of the borrowings) of at
least 300% of all borrowings.

 

COMMERCIAL INSTRUMENTS: Commercial instruments consist of short-term U.S.
dollar-denominated obligations issued by domestic corporations or foreign
corporations and foreign commercial banks. Investments by a Fund in commercial
paper will consist of issues rated in a manner consistent with such Fund's
investment policies and objective. In addition, a Fund may acquire unrated
commercial paper and corporate bonds that are determined by the Adviser at the
time of purchase to be of comparable quality to rated instruments that may be
acquired by a Fund. Commercial instruments include variable-rate master demand
notes, which are unsecured instruments that permit the indebtedness thereunder
to vary and provide for periodic adjustments in the interest rate, and variable-
and floating-rate instruments.

 

CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES, PREFERRED STOCK, AND WARRANTS: The Funds may invest in
debt securities convertible into or exchangeable for equity securities,
preferred stocks or warrants. Preferred stocks are securities that represent an
ownership interest in a corporation providing the owner with claims on a
company's earnings and assets before common stock owners, but after bond or
other debt security owners. Warrants are options to buy a stated number of
shares of common stock at a specified price any time during the life of the
warrants.

 

FUTURES, OPTIONS AND OTHER DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS: The Funds may attempt to
reduce the overall level of investment risk of particular securities and attempt
to protect a Fund against adverse market movements by investing in futures,
options and other derivative instruments. These include the purchase and writing
of options on securities (including index options), and investing in futures
contracts for the purchase or sale of instruments based on financial indices,
including interest rate indices or indices of U.S. Government, equity or fixed
income securities ("futures contracts"), options on futures contracts, forward
contracts and swaps and swap-related products such as interest rate swaps,
currency swaps, caps, collars and floors.

 

The use of futures, options, forward contracts and swaps exposes a Fund to
additional investment risks and transaction costs. If the Adviser incorrectly
analyzes market conditions or does not employ the appropriate strategy with
respect to these instruments, a Fund could be left in a less favorable position.
Additional risks inherent in the use of futures, options, forward contracts and
swaps include: imperfect correlation between the price of futures, options and
forward contracts and movements in the prices of the securities or currencies
being hedged; the possible absence of a liquid secondary market for any
particular instrument at any time; and the possible need to defer closing out
certain hedged positions to avoid adverse tax consequences. A Fund may not
purchase put and call options

 
20
 
<PAGE>
which are traded on a national stock exchange in an amount exceeding 5% of its
net assets. Further information on the use of futures, options and other
derivative instruments, and the associated risks, is contained in the SAI.
 

ILLIQUID SECURITIES: Certain securities may be sold only pursuant to certain
legal restrictions, and may be difficult to sell. The Funds will not hold more
than 15% of the value of their respective net assets in securities that are
illiquid or such lower percentage as may be required by the states in which the
appropriate Fund sells its shares. Repurchase agreements, time deposits and
guaranteed investment contracts that do not provide for payment to a Fund within
seven days after notice, and illiquid restricted securities are subject to the
limitation on illiquid securities.

 

If otherwise consistent with its investment objective and policies, certain
Funds may purchase securities that are not registered under the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended (the "1933 Act") but which can be sold to "qualified
institutional buyers" in accordance with Rule 144A under the 1933 Act, or which
were issued under Section 4(2) of the 1933 Act. Any such security will not be
considered illiquid so long as it is determined by a Fund's Board of Trustees or
the Adviser, acting under guidelines approved and monitored by such Fund's
Board, after considering trading activity, availability of reliable price
information and other relevant information, that an adequate trading market
exists for that security. To the extent that, for a period of time, qualified
institutional or other buyers cease purchasing such restricted securities
pursuant to Rule 144A or otherwise, the level of illiquidity of a Fund holding
such securities may increase during such period.

 

MONEY MARKET INSTRUMENTS: The term "money market instruments" refers to
instruments with remaining maturities of one year or less. Money market
instruments may include, among other instruments, certain U.S. Treasury
obligations, U.S. Government obligations, bank instruments, commercial
instruments, repurchase agreements and municipal securities. Such instruments
are described in this Appendix A.

 

OTHER INVESTMENT COMPANIES: Each Fund may invest in securities issued by other
investment companies to the extent that such investments are consistent with the
Fund's investment objective and policies and permissible under the 1940 Act. As
a shareholder of another investment company, a Fund would bear, along with other
shareholders, its pro rata portion of the other investment company's expenses,
including advisory fees. These expenses would be in addition to the advisory and
other expenses that a Fund bears directly in connection with its own operations.

 

REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS: A repurchase agreement involves the purchase of a
security by a Fund and a simultaneous agreement (generally with a bank or
broker/dealer) to repurchase that security from the Fund at a specified price
and date or upon demand. This technique offers a method of earning income on
idle cash. A risk associated with repurchase agreements is the failure of the
seller to repurchase the securities as agreed, which may cause a Fund to suffer
a loss if the market value of such securities declines before they can be
liquidated on the open market. Repurchase agreements with a duration of more
than seven days are considered illiquid securities and are subject to the limit
stated above. A Fund may enter into repurchase agreements jointly with other
investment portfolios of Nations Fund.

 

SECURITIES LENDING: To increase return on portfolio securities, the Funds may
lend their portfolio securities to broker/dealers and other institutional
investors pursuant to agreements requiring that the loans be continuously
secured by collateral equal at all times in value to at least the market value
of the securities loaned. There is a risk of delay in receiving collateral or in
recovering the securities loaned or even a loss of rights in the collateral
should the borrower of the securities fail financially. However, loans are made
only to borrowers deemed by the Adviser to be credit worthy and when, in its
judgment, the income to be earned from the loan justifies the attendant risks.
The aggregate of all outstanding loans of a Fund may not exceed 30% of the value
of its total assets.

 
                                                                              21
 
<PAGE>
U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS: U.S. Government obligations consist of marketable
securities and instruments issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or any of
its agencies, authorities or instrumentalities. Direct obligations are issued by
the U.S. Treasury and include all U.S. Treasury instruments. U.S. Treasury
obligations differ only in their interest rates, maturities and time of
issuance. Obligations of U.S. Government agencies, authorities and
instrumentalities are issued by government-sponsored agencies and enterprises
acting under authority of Congress. Although obligations of federal agencies,
authorities and instrumentalities are not debts of the U.S. Treasury, some are
backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury, such as direct
pass-through certificates of the Government National Mortgage Association; some
are supported by the right of the issuer to borrow from the U.S. Government,
such as obligations of Federal Home Loan Banks, and some are backed only by the
credit of the issuer itself, such as obligations of the Federal National
Mortgage Association. No assurance can be given that the U.S. Government would
provide financial support to government-sponsored instrumentalities if it is not
obligated to do so by law. The market value of U.S. Government obligations may
fluctuate due to fluctuations in market interest rates. As a general matter, the
value of debt instruments, including U.S. Government obligations, declines when
market interest rates increase and rises when market interest rates decrease.
Certain types of U.S. Government obligations are subject to fluctuations in
yield or value due to their structure or contract terms.
 
WHEN-ISSUED, DELAYED DELIVERY AND FORWARD COMMITMENT SECURITIES: The purchase of
new issues of securities on a "when-issued," "delayed delivery" or "forward
commitment" basis occurs when the payment for and delivery of securities takes
place at a future date. Because actual payment for and delivery of such
securities generally take place 15 to 45 days after the purchase date,
purchasers of such securities bear the risk that interest rates on debt
securities at the time of delivery may be higher or lower than those contracted
for on the security purchased.
 
22
 


<PAGE>
Prospectus
 

                                  INVESTOR C SHARES
                                   OCTOBER 15, 1996

 

This Prospectus describes NATIONS MANAGED INDEX
FUND and NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND (the
"Funds") of Nations Fund Trust, an open-end
management investment company in the Nations Fund
Family ("Nations Fund" or "Nations Fund Family").
This Prospectus describes one class of shares of
the Funds -- Investor C Shares.

 

This Prospectus sets forth concisely the
information about the Funds that a prospective
purchaser of Investor C Shares should consider
before investing. Investors should read this
Prospectus and retain it for future reference.
Additional information about Nations Fund Trust is
contained in a separate Statement of Additional
Information (the "SAI") that has been filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC")
and is available upon request without charge by
writing or calling Nations Fund at its address or
telephone number shown below. The SAI, dated
October 15, 1996, is incorporated by reference in
its entirety into this Prospectus. NationsBanc
Advisors, Inc. ("NBAI") is the investment adviser
to the Funds. TradeStreet Investment Associates,
Inc. ("TradeStreet") is investment sub-adviser to
the Funds. As used herein the "Adviser" shall mean
NBAI and/or TradeStreet as the context may require.

 

SHARES OF NATIONS FUND ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OTHER
OBLIGATIONS OF, OR ISSUED, ENDORSED OR GUARANTEED
BY, NATIONSBANK, N.A. ("NATIONSBANK") OR ANY OF ITS
AFFILIATES. SUCH SHARES ARE NOT INSURED BY THE U.S.
GOVERNMENT, THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD OR ANY OTHER
GOVERNMENT AGENCY. AN INVESTMENT IN THE FUNDS
INVOLVES CERTAIN RISKS, INCLUDING POSSIBLE LOSS OF
PRINCIPAL.

 
NATIONSBANK AND CERTAIN OF ITS AFFILIATES PROVIDE
CERTAIN OTHER SERVICES TO NATIONS FUND, FOR WHICH
THEY ARE COMPENSATED. STEPHENS INC., WHICH IS NOT
AFFILIATED WITH NATIONSBANK, IS THE SPONSOR AND
ADMINISTRATOR AND SERVES AS THE DISTRIBUTOR FOR
NATIONS FUND.
 
THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR
DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION, NOR
HAS THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY
STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE
ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY
REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL
OFFENSE.
 

                                                     Nations
                                                     Managed
                                                     Index Fund
                                                     Nations
                                                     Managed SmallCap
                                                     Index Fund




 
                                                     For Fund information call:
                                                     1-800-321-7854
                                                     Nations Fund
                                                     c/o Stephens Inc.
                                                     One NationsBank Plaza
                                                     33rd Floor
                                                     Charlotte, NC 28255
                                                     NATIONS FUND
 
NF-96696-1096
 
<PAGE>
                             Table  Of  Contents


About The Funds


 
                             Prospectus Summary                                3
 
                             Expenses Summary                                  4
 

                             Objectives                                        5

 

                             How The Objectives Are Pursued                    5

 

                             How Performance Is Shown                          9

 

                             How The Funds Are Managed                        10

 

                             Organization And History                         13

 
About Your Investment
 

                             How To Buy Shares                                14

 

                             How To Redeem Shares                             15

 

                             How To Exchange Shares                           17

 

                             Shareholder Servicing And Distribution Plans     18

 

                             How The Funds Value Their Shares                 19

 

                             How Dividends And Distributions are Made; Tax
                             Information                                      20

 

                             Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities               21

 

 

                             NO PERSON HAS BEEN AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY
                             INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS NOT
                             CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS, OR IN THE FUNDS' SAI
                             INCORPORATED HEREIN BY REFERENCE, IN CONNECTION
                             WITH THE OFFERING MADE BY THIS PROSPECTUS AND, IF
                             GIVEN OR MADE, SUCH INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS
                             MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED
                             BY NATIONS FUND OR ITS DISTRIBUTOR. THIS PROSPECTUS
                             DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFERING BY NATIONS FUND OR
                             BY THE DISTRIBUTOR IN ANY JURISDICTION IN WHICH
                             SUCH OFFERING MAY NOT LAWFULLY BE MADE.
 
                                                                               2
 
<PAGE>
About The Funds
 
   Prospectus Summary
 
(Bullet) TYPE OF COMPANY: Open-end management investment company.
 

(Bullet) INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES:

 

         (BULLET) Nations Managed Index Fund's investment objective is to seek,
                  over the long-term, to provide a total return which (gross of
                  fees and expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard &
                  Poor's 500 Composite Stock Price Index.

 

         (Bullet) Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund's investment
                  objective is to seek, over the long-term, to provide
                  a total return which (gross of fees and expenses)
                  exceeds the total return of the Standard & Poor's
                  SmallCap 600 Index.

 

         (Bullet) When consistent with the Funds' objectives,
                  the Funds will employ various techniques to
                  manage capital gain distributions.

 

(Bullet) INVESTMENT ADVISER: NationsBanc Advisors, Inc. serves as the investment
         adviser to the Funds. NBAI provides investment advice to more than 43
         investment company portfolios in the Nations Fund Family. TradeStreet
         Investment Associates, Inc. provides sub-advisory services to the
         Funds. See "How The Funds Are Managed."

 

(Bullet) DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations
         Managed SmallCap Index Fund declare and pay dividends from net
         investment income each calendar quarter. Each Fund's net realized
         capital gains, including net short-term capital gains, are distributed
         at least annually.

 

(Bullet) RISK FACTORS: Although the Adviser seeks to achieve the investment
         objective of the Funds, there is no assurance that it will be able to
         do so. Investments in the Funds are not insured against loss of
         principal. Investments by the Funds in common stocks and other equity
         securities are subject to stock market risk, which is the risk that the
         value of the stocks the Funds hold may decline over short or even
         extended periods. Certain of the Funds' permissible investments may
         constitute derivative securities. Certain types of derivative
         securities can, under certain circumstances, significantly increase an
         investor's exposure to market or other risks. For a discussion of these
         and other factors, see "How Objectives Are Pursued -- Risk
         Considerations" and "Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities."

 
(Bullet) MINIMUM PURCHASE: $1,000 minimum initial investment per record holder
         except that the minimum initial investment is: $500 for Individual
         Retirement Account ("IRA") investors; $250 for non-working spousal
         IRAs; and $100 for investors participating on a monthly basis in the
         Systematic Investment Plan. There is no minimum investment amount for
         investments by certain 401(k) and employee pension plans or salary
         reduction -- Individual Retirement Accounts. The minimum subsequent
         investment is $100, except for investments pursuant to the Systematic
         Investment Plan. See "How To Buy Shares."
 
                                                                               3
 
<PAGE>
   Expenses Summary
 

Expenses are one of several factors to consider when investing in the Funds. The
following tables summarize shareholder transaction and operating expenses for
Investor C Shares of the Funds. The Examples show the cumulative expenses
attributable to a hypothetical $1,000 investment in Investor C Shares of the
indicated Fund over specified periods.

 
INVESTOR C SHARES
 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                 Nations            Nations
                                                                                                 Managed            Managed
                                                                                                  Index            SmallCap
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES                                                                  Fund            Index Fund
<S>                                                                                         <C>                <C>
Maximum Sales Load Imposed on Purchases (as a percentage of offering price)                          None               None
Maximum Deferred Sales Charge (as a percentage of the lower of the original purchase price
  or redemption proceeds)                                                                            .50%               .50%

 
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES
(as a percentage of average net assets)
 

Management Fees (After Fee Waivers)                                                                  .30%              0.30%
Rule 12b-1 Fees (After Fee Waivers)                                                                  .25%              0.25%
Shareholder Servicing Fees                                                                           .25%              0.25%
Other Expenses                                                                                       .20%              0.20%
Total Operating Expenses (After Fee Waivers)                                                        1.00%              1.00%
</TABLE>

 

EXAMPLES:

 

You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment in Investor C Shares
of the Funds, assuming (1) a 5% annual return and (2) redemption at the end of
each time period.

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                  Nations              Nations
                                                                                                  Managed              Managed
                                                                                                   Index              SmallCap
                                                                                                   Fund              Index Fund
<S>                                                                                         <C>                  <C>
1 Year                                                                                           $      10            $      10
3 Years                                                                                          $      32            $      32
</TABLE>

 

You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment in Investor C Shares
of the Funds, assuming a 5% annual return but no redemption.

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                  Nations              Nations
                                                                                                  Managed              Managed
                                                                                                   Index              SmallCap
                                                                                                   Fund              Index Fund
<S>                                                                                         <C>                  <C>
1 Year                                                                                           $      10            $      10
3 Years                                                                                          $      32            $      32
</TABLE>

 
4
 
<PAGE>

The purpose of the foregoing tables is to assist an investor in understanding
the various shareholder transaction and operating expenses that an investor in
Investor C Shares will bear either directly or indirectly. The figures in the
above tables are based on estimates for the fiscal year and have been restated
as necessary to reflect anticipated fee waivers. There is no assurance that any
fee waivers and reimbursements will continue beyond the current fiscal year. If
fee waivers and/or reimbursements are discontinued, the amounts contained in the
"Examples" above may increase. For a more complete description of the Funds'
operating expenses, see "How The Funds Are Managed." For a more complete
description of the Rule 12b-1 and shareholder servicing fees payable by the
Funds, see "Shareholder Servicing And Distribution Plan."

 

Absent fee waivers, "Management Fees," "Rule 12b-1 Fees" and "Total Operating
Expenses" would be .50%, .75% and 1.20%, respectively, for both Nations Managed
Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund.

 
THE FOREGOING SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED TO BE AN ACTUAL REPRESENTATION OF PAST OR
FUTURE EXPENSES OR PERFORMANCE. ACTUAL EXPENSES AND RATES OF RETURN MAY BE
GREATER OR LESS THAN THOSE SHOWN.
 

   Objectives

 

NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND: Nations Managed Index Fund's investment objective is
to seek, over the long-term, to provide a total return which (gross of fees and
expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard & Poor's 500 Composite Stock
Price Index.

 

NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND: Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund's
investment objective is to seek, over the long-term, to provide a total return
which (gross of fees and expenses) exceeds the total return of the Standard &
Poor's SmallCap 600 Index.

 

   How The Objectives Are Pursued

 

NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND: In seeking to achieve its investment objective, the
Fund will invest in selected equity securities that are included in the Standard
& Poor's 500 Composite Stock Price Index (the "S&P 500 Index")1. The S&P 500
Index is a value weighted index consisting of 500 common stocks chosen for
market size, liquidity and industry group representation.


Unlike traditional index funds, the Fund has a "managed" aspect. The Adviser
believes that a managed equity index portfolio can provide investors with
positive incremental performance relative to the S&P 500 Index while minimizing
the downside risk of underperforming the Index over time.

 

The initial stock universe considered by the Adviser is the S&P 500 Index. The
Adviser ranks the attractiveness of each security according to a multi-factor
valuation model. Both value and momentum factors are considered in the ranking
process. Value factors such as book value, earnings yield and cash flow measure
a stock's intrinsic worth versus its market price, while momentum
characteristics such as price momentum, earnings growth and earnings
acceleration measure a stock relative to others in the same industry. Each stock
is assigned a ranking from one to 10 (best to worst). The Adviser then screens
out the lower rated stocks resulting in a portfolio of 350 to 400 holdings that
capture the investment characteristics of the Index.

 

(1) "Standard & Poor's 500" is a registered service mark of Standard & Poor's
    Corporation ("S&P").

 
                                                                               5
 
<PAGE>

The S&P 500 Index consists of 500 selected common stocks, most of which are
listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Different stocks have different
weightings in the Index, depending on the amount of stock outstanding and its
current price.

 

In addition, when consistent with the Fund's investment objective, the Fund will
employ various techniques to manage capital gain distributions. These techniques
include utilizing a share identification methodology whereby the Fund will
specifically identify each lot of shares of portfolio securities that it holds,
which will allow the Fund to sell first those specific shares with the highest
tax basis in order to reduce the amount of recognized capital gains as compared
with a sale of identical portfolio securities, if any, with a lower tax basis.
The Fund will sell first those shares with the highest tax basis only when it is
in the best interest of the Fund to do so, and reserves the right to sell other
shares when appropriate. In addition, the Fund may, at times, sell portfolio
securities in order to realize capital losses. Such capital losses would be used
to offset realized capital gains thereby reducing capital gain distributions.
Additionally, the Adviser will, consistent with the multi-factor valuation model
discussed above, employ a low portfolio turnover strategy designed to defer the
realization of capital gains.

 

Under normal conditions, the Adviser will attempt to invest as much of the
Fund's assets as is practical and, in any event at least 65% of its total
assets, in common stocks which are included in the S&P 500 Index. The Fund is
expected, however, to maintain a position in high-quality short-term debt
securities and money market instruments to meet redemption requests. If the
Adviser believes that market conditions warrant a temporary defensive posture,
the Fund may invest without limitation in high-quality short-term debt
securities and money market instruments. These securities and money market
instruments may include domestic and foreign commercial paper, certificates of
deposit, bankers' acceptances and time deposits, U.S. Government obligations,
("U.S. Government Obligations") and repurchase agreements.

 

The Fund also may invest in certain specified derivative securities including:
exchange-traded options; over-the-counter options executed with primary dealers,
including long calls and puts and covered calls to enhance return; and U.S.
exchange-traded financial futures approved by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission ("CFTC") and options thereon for market exposure risk management. The
Fund may lend its portfolio securities to qualified institutional investors. The
Fund also may invest in restricted, private placement and other illiquid
securities. In addition, the Fund may invest in securities issued by other
investment companies, consistent with the Fund's investment objective and
policies.

 

NATIONS MANAGED SMALLCAP INDEX FUND: In seeking to achieve its investment
objective, the Fund will invest in selected equity securities that are included
in the Standard & Poor's SmallCap 600 Index (the "S&P 600 Index")2. The S&P 600
Index is a capitalization weighted index consisting of 600 domestic stocks which
capture the economic and industry characteristics of small stock performance.
Most of these stocks are listed on either the New York, American or NASDAQ stock
exchanges.

 

Unlike traditional index funds, the Fund has a "managed" aspect. The Adviser
believes that a managed equity index portfolio can provide investors with
positive incremental performance relative to the S&P 600 Index while minimizing
the downside risk of underperforming the Index over time.

 

From the initial S&P 600 Index stock universe the Adviser ranks the
attractiveness of each security according to a multi-factor valuation model.
Both value and momentum factors are considered in the ranking process. Value
factors such as book value, earnings yield and cash flow measure a stock's
intrinsic worth versus its market price, while momentum characteristics such as
price momentum, earnings growth and earnings acceleration measure a stock
relative to
 
(2) "Standard & Poor's 600" is a registered service mark of S&P.

 
6
 
<PAGE>

others in the same industry. Each stock is assigned a ranking from 1 to 10 (best
to worst). The Adviser then screens out the lower rated stocks resulting in a
portfolio of approximately 450-500 holdings that capture the investment
characteristics of the Index.

 
In addition, when consistent with the Fund's investment objective, the Fund will
employ various techniques to manage capital gain distributions. These techniques
include utilizing a share identification methodology whereby the Fund will
specifically identify each lot of shares of portfolio securities that it holds,
which will allow the Fund to sell first those specific shares with the highest
tax basis in order to reduce the amount of recognized capital gains as compared
with a sale of identical portfolio securities, if any, with a lower tax basis.
The Fund will sell first those shares with the highest tax basis only when it is
in the best interest of the Fund to do so, and reserves the right to sell other
shares when appropriate. In addition, the Fund may, at times, sell portfolio
securities in order to realize capital losses. Such capital losses would be used
to offset realized capital gains thereby reducing capital gain distributions.
Additionally, the Adviser will, consistent with the multi-factor valuation model
discussed above, employ a low portfolio turnover strategy designed to defer the
realization of capital gains.
 

Under normal conditions, substantially all of the Fund's assets, and, in any
event at least 65% of its total assets, will be invested in common stocks which
are included in the S&P 600 Index. The Fund is expected, however, to maintain a
position in high-quality short-term debt securities and money market instruments
to meet redemption requests. If the Adviser believes that market conditions
warrant a temporary defensive posture, the Fund may invest without limitation in
high-quality short-term debt securities and money market instruments. These
securities and money market instruments may include domestic and foreign
commercial paper, certificates of deposit, bankers' acceptances and time
deposits, U.S. Government Obligations and repurchase agreements.

 

The Fund also may invest in certain specified derivative securities including:
exchange-traded options; over-the-counter options executed with primary dealers,
including long calls and puts and covered calls to enhance return; and U.S.
exchange-traded financial futures approved by the CFTC and options thereon for
market exposure risk management. The Fund may lend its portfolio securities to
qualified institutional investors. The Fund also may invest in restricted,
private placement and other illiquid securities. In addition, the Fund may
invest in securities issued by other investment companies, consistent with the
Fund's investment objective and policies.

 

ABOUT THE INDEXES: The S&P 500 Index is composed of 500 common stocks, which are
chosen by S&P on a statistical basis to be included in the Index. The S&P
SmallCap 600 Index is composed of 600 domestic stocks, which are chosen by S&P
based on, among other things, market size, liquidity and industry group
representation. The S&P SmallCap 600 Index is designed to be a benchmark of
small capitalization stock performance.

 

The inclusion of a stock in the S&P 500 Index or the S&P SmallCap 600 Index in
no way implies that S&P believes the stock to be an attractive investment. The
Indexes are determined, composed and calculated by S&P without regard to the
Funds. S&P is neither a sponsor of, nor in any way affiliated with, the Funds,
and S&P makes no representation or warranty, expressed or implied, on the
advisability of investing in the Funds or as to the ability of the Indexes to
track general stock market performance. S&P disclaims all warranties of
merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose or use with respect to the
Indexes or any data included therein.

 

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER: Generally, the Funds will purchase portfolio securities for
capital appreciation or investment income, or both, and not for short-term
trading profits. While it is not possible to predict exactly annual portfolio
turnover rates, it is expected that under normal market conditions, the annual
portfolio turnover rate for each Fund will not exceed 25%.

 

RISK CONSIDERATIONS: Although the Adviser will seek to achieve the investment
objective of each Fund, there is no assurance that it will be

 
                                                                               7
 
<PAGE>

able to do so. No single fund should be considered, by itself, to provide a
complete investment program for any investor. Investments in a Fund are not
insured against loss of principal.

 

Investments by a Fund in common stocks and other equity securities are subject
to stock market risk. The value of the stocks that the Fund holds, like the
broader stock market, may decline over short or even extended periods.

 

Certain of the Funds' permissible investments may constitute derivative
securities, which are securities whose value is derived, at least in part, from
an underlying index or reference rate. There are certain types of derivative
securities that can, under certain circumstances, significantly increase a
purchaser's exposure to market or other risks. The Adviser, however, only
purchases derivative securities in circumstances where it believes such
purchases are consistent with a Fund's investment objective and do not unduly
increase the Fund's exposure to market or other risks. For additional risk
information regarding the Funds' investments in particular instruments, see
"Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities."

 

The techniques employed by the Adviser to seek to manage capital gain
distributions will generally only have the effect of deferring the realization
of capital gains. For example, to the extent that the capital gains recognized
on a sale of portfolio securities arise from the sale of specifically-identified
securities with higher tax bases, subsequent sales of the same portfolio
securities will be calculated by reference to the lower tax basis securities
that remain in the portfolio. Under this scenario, an investor who purchases
shares of a Fund after the first sale could receive capital gain distributions
that are higher than the distributions that would have been received if this
methodology had not been used. Therefore, certain investors actually could be
disadvantaged by the techniques employed by the Fund to seek to manage capital
gain distributions, depending on the timing of their purchase of Fund shares.
Even if there are no subsequent sales, upon a redemption or exchange of Fund
shares an investor will have to recognize gain to the extent that the net asset
value of Fund shares at such time exceeds such investor's tax basis in his or
her Fund shares.

 

The various techniques employed by the Funds to manage capital gain
distributions may result in the accumulation of substantial unrealized gains in
the Funds' portfolios. Moreover, the realization of capital gains is not
entirely within a Fund's control because it is at least partly dependent on
shareholder purchase and redemption activity. Capital gain distributions may
vary considerably from year-to-year.

 

INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS: Each Fund is subject to a number of investment
limitations. The following investment limitations are matters of fundamental
policy and may not be changed without the affirmative vote of the holders of a
majority of each Fund's outstanding shares. Other investment limitations that
cannot be changed without such a vote of shareholders are described in the SAI.

 

Each Fund may not:

 
1. Purchase any securities which would cause 25% or more of the value of the
Fund's total assets at the time of such purchase to be invested in the
securities of one or more issuers conducting their principal activities in the
same industry. (For purposes of this limitation, U.S. Government securities are
not considered members of any industry.)
 

2. Make loans, except that a Fund may purchase and hold debt instruments
(whether such instruments are part of a public offering or privately placed),
may enter into repurchase agreements and may lend portfolio securities in
accordance with its investment policies.

 

3. Purchase securities of any one issuer (other than securities issued or
guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities) if,
immediately after such purchase, more than 5% of the value of such Fund's total
assets would be invested in the securities of such issuer, except that up to 25%
of the value of the Fund's total assets may be invested without regard to these
limitations and with respect to 75% of such Fund's assets, the Fund will not
hold more than 10% of the voting securities of any issuer.

 
8
 
<PAGE>

The investment objective and policies of each Fund, unless otherwise specified,
may be changed without a vote of the Fund's shareholders. If the investment
objective or policies of a Fund change, shareholders should consider whether the
Fund remains an appropriate investment in light of their then current position
and needs.

 
   How Performance Is Shown
 

From time to time the Funds may advertise the total return and yield on a class
of shares. BOTH TOTAL RETURN AND YIELD FIGURES ARE BASED ON HISTORICAL DATA AND
ARE NOT INTENDED TO INDICATE FUTURE PERFORMANCE. The "total return" of a class
of shares of a Fund may be calculated on an average annual total return basis or
an aggregate total return basis. Average annual total return refers to the
average annual compounded rates of return on a class of shares over one-, five-,
and ten-year periods or the life of a Fund (as stated in the advertisement) that
would equate an initial amount invested at the beginning of a stated period to
the ending redeemable value of the investment, assuming the reinvestment of all
dividend and capital gain distributions. Aggregate total return reflects the
total percentage change in the value of the investment over the measuring
period, again assuming the reinvestment of all dividends and capital gain
distributions. Total return may also be presented for other periods.

 

"Yield" is calculated by dividing the annualized net investment income per share
during a recent 30-day (or one month) period of a class of shares of a Fund by
the maximum public offering price per share on the last day of that period.

 

Set forth below is certain performance data for the Enhanced Equity Index Common
Trust Fund and Enhanced Small Cap Equity Index Common Trust Fund (the "CTFs"),
each of which is currently managed on behalf of NationsBank by TradeStreet.
(Prior to the formation of TradeStreet in 1995, the CTFs were managed solely by
NationsBank.) The performance data for the CTFs is deemed relevant because the
Enhanced Equity Index and Enhanced Small Cap Equity Index Common Trust Funds
have investment objectives and policies that are substantially similar to those
of Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund,
respectively. Moreover, the portfolio manager of TradeStreet (who currently
manages the CTFs and the Funds) employs the same quantitative investment process
for the Funds that has, and continues to be, utilized for the CTFs. THIS
PERFORMANCE DATA REPRESENTS PAST PERFORMANCE OF THE CTFS AND IS NOT NECESSARILY
INDICATIVE OF THE FUTURE PERFORMANCE OF THE CTFS OR THE FUNDS.

 

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS FOR THE
PERIODS INDICATED THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 1996*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                        Since
                    One        Three        Five      Inception
                    Year        Year        Year     (12/31/88)**
<S>              <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
Enhanced Equity
  Index Common
  Trust Fund       19.78%      16.91%      14.90%      16.03%
S&P 500 Index      20.33%      17.40%      15.21%      15.79%
Lipper Equity+     19.77%      16.90%      14.70%      15.18%
Index Funds
  Average
</TABLE>

 

ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                      Enhanced                     Lipper
                    Equity Index                Equity Index
                    Common Trust      S&P          Funds
Year                    Fund       500 Index      Average+
<S>                 <C>           <C>           <C>
1989                    34.12%        31.55%        30.58%
1990                    -1.52%        -3.15%        -3.57%
1991                    31.72%        30.56%        29.65%
1992                     5.52%         7.64%         7.12%
1993                    10.47%         9.99%         9.52%
1994                     0.69%         1.31%         0.90%
1995                    37.66%        37.45%        36.82%
</TABLE>

 
                                                                               9
 
<PAGE>

TOTAL RETURNS FOR THE PERIODS INDICATED
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 1996*

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                   Since
                                    Year-To-     Inception
                    Three Month       Date       (10/1/95)
<S>                 <C>           <C>           <C>
Enhanced Small Cap
  Equity Index
  Common Trust
  Fund                 4.35%         16.33%        17.25%
S&P 600 Index          3.21%         14.79%        15.31%
</TABLE>

 

 * The total returns above reflect the deduction of 0.50% of fees and expenses
   per annum. The CTFs are not subject to certain investment limitations,
   diversification requirements, and other restrictions imposed by the 1940 Act
   and the Internal Revenue Code, which if applicable, may have adversely
   affected the performance results of the CTFs.

 

** Prior to 12/31/88 the Enhanced Equity Index Common Trust Fund was managed
   with a different objective and policies and therefore performance prior
   thereto is not included in the prior performance calculations.

 

 +The Lipper Equity Index Funds Average represents the average performance of
  mutual funds with similar objectives monitored by Lipper Analytical Services,
  Inc. during the periods shown.

 

Investment performance, which will vary, is based on many factors, including
market conditions, the composition of a Fund's portfolio and a Fund's operating
expenses. Investment performance also often reflects the risks associated with
such Fund's investment objective and policies. These factors should be
considered when comparing a Fund's investment results to those of other mutual
funds and other investment vehicles. Since yields fluctuate, yield data cannot
necessarily be used to compare an investment in a Fund with bank deposits,
savings accounts, and similar investment alternatives which often provide an
agreed-upon or guaranteed fixed yield for a stated period of time.

 

In addition to Investor C Shares, the Funds offer Primary A, Primary B and
Investor A Shares. Each class of shares may bear different sales charges,
shareholder servicing fees and other expenses, which may cause the performance
of a class to differ from the performance of the other classes. Total return and
yield quotations will be computed separately for each class of the Funds'
shares. Any fees charged by a selling agent and/or servicing agent directly to
its customers' accounts in connection with investments in the Funds will not be
included in calculations of total return or yield. Each Fund's annual report
contains additional performance information and is available upon request
without charge from the Funds' distributor or your selling agent.

 

   How The Funds Are Managed

 
The business and affairs of Nations Fund Trust are managed under the direction
of its Board of Trustees. Nations Fund Trust's SAI contains the names of and
general background information concerning each Trustee of Nations Fund Trust.
 
Nations Fund and the Adviser have adopted codes of ethics which contain policies
on personal securities transactions by "access persons," including portfolio
managers and investment analysts. These policies substantially comply in all
material respects with the recommendations set forth in the May 9, 1994 Report
of the Advisory Group on Personal Investing of the Investment Company Institute.
 

INVESTMENT ADVISER: NationsBanc Advisors, Inc. serves as investment adviser to
the Funds. NBAI is a wholly owned subsidiary of NationsBank, which in turn is a
wholly owned banking subsidiary of NationsBank Corporation, a bank holding
company organized as a North Carolina corporation. NBAI has its principal
offices at One NationsBank Plaza, Charlotte, North Carolina 28255.

 

TradeStreet Investment Associates, Inc., with principal offices at One
NationsBank Plaza, Charlotte, North Carolina 28255, serves as investment
sub-adviser to the Funds. TradeStreet is a wholly owned subsidiary of
NationsBank. TradeStreet provides investment management services to individuals,
corporations and institutions.

 
10
 
<PAGE>

Subject to the general supervision of Nations Fund Trust's Board of Trustees,
and in accordance with each Fund's investment policies, the Adviser formulates
guidelines and lists of approved investments for each Fund, makes decisions with
respect to and places orders for each Fund's purchases and sales of portfolio
securities and maintains records relating to such purchases and sales. The
Adviser is authorized to allocate purchase and sale orders for portfolio
securities to certain financial institutions, including, in the case of agency
transactions, financial institutions which are affiliated with the Adviser or
which have sold shares in such Funds, if the Adviser believes that the quality
of the transaction and the commission are comparable to what they would be with
other qualified brokerage firms. From time to time, to the extent consistent
with its investment objective, policies and restrictions, each Fund may invest
in securities of companies with which NationsBank has a lending relationship.
For the services provided and expenses assumed pursuant to an Investment
Advisory Agreement, NBAI is entitled to receive an advisory fee, computed daily
and paid monthly, at the annual rate of 0.50% of the average daily net assets of
each Fund.

 

From time to time, NBAI (and/or TradeStreet) may waive or reimburse (either
voluntarily or pursuant to applicable state limitations) advisory fees and/or
expenses payable by a Fund.

 

For the services provided and the expenses assumed pursuant to a Sub-Advisory
Agreement, NBAI will pay TradeStreet sub-advisory fees, computed daily and paid
monthly, at the annual rate of 0.10% of the average daily net assets of each
Fund.

 
Greg W. Golden is a Structured Products Manager, Equity Management for
TradeStreet and is Portfolio Manager for Nations Equity Index Fund, Nations
Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund. He has been
Portfolio Manager for Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund since its inception.
Prior to assuming his position with TradeStreet in 1996, he was Vice President
and Structured Products Manager for the Investment Management Group at
NationsBank. He has worked in the investment community since 1990. His past
experience includes portfolio management, derivatives management and
quantitative analysis for the Investment Management Group at NationsBank and
Sovran Bank of Tennessee. Mr. Golden received a B.B.A. in Finance from Belmont
University. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst candidate and a member of the
Association for Investment Management and Research as well as the North Carolina
Society of Financial Analysts, Inc.
 
Morrison & Foerster LLP, counsel to Nations Fund and special counsel to
NationsBank, has advised Nations Fund and NationsBank that NationsBank and its
affiliates may perform the services contemplated by the Investment Advisory
Agreement and this Prospectus without violation of the Glass-Steagall Act. Such
counsel has pointed out, however, that there are no controlling judicial or
administrative interpretations or decisions and that future judicial or
administrative interpretations of, or decisions relating to, present federal or
state statutes, including the Glass-Steagall Act, and regulations relating to
the permissible activities of banks and their subsidiaries or affiliates, as
well as future changes in federal or state statutes, including the
Glass-Steagall Act, and regulations and judicial or administrative decisions or
interpretations thereof, could prevent such entities from continuing to perform,
in whole or in part, such services. If any such entity were prohibited from
performing any of such services, it is expected that new agreements would be
proposed or entered into with another entity or entities qualified to perform
such services.
 

OTHER SERVICE PROVIDERS: Stephens Inc. ("Stephens"), with principal offices at
111 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201, serves as the administrator of
Nations Fund pursuant to an Administration Agreement. Pursuant to the terms of
the Administration Agreement, Stephens provides various administrative and
corporate secretarial services to the Funds, including providing general
oversight of other service providers, office space, utilities and various legal
and administrative services in connection with the satisfaction of various
regulatory requirements applicable to the Funds.

 
                                                                              11
 
<PAGE>

First Data Investor Services Group, Inc. ("First Data"), formerly The
Shareholder Services Group, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of First Data
Corporation, with principal offices at One Exchange Place, Boston, Massachusetts
02109, serves as the co-administrator of Nations Fund pursuant to a
Co-Administration Agreement. Under the Co-Administration Agreement, First Data
provides various administrative and accounting services to the Funds including
performing the calculations necessary to determine the net asset value per share
and dividends of each class of shares of the Funds, preparing tax returns and
financial statements and maintaining the portfolio records and certain of the
general accounting records for the Funds.

 

For the services rendered pursuant to the Administration and Co-Administration
Agreements, Stephens and First Data are entitled to receive a combined fee at an
annual rate of up to 0.10% of each Fund's average daily net assets.

 

NationsBank serves as sub-administrator for Nations Fund pursuant to a
Sub-Administration Agreement. Pursuant to the terms of the Sub-Administration
Agreement, NationsBank assists Stephens in supervising, coordinating and
monitoring various aspects of the Funds' administrative operations. For
providing such services NationsBank shall be entitled to receive a monthly fee
from Stephens based on an annual rate of 0.01% of the Funds' average daily net
assets.

 

Shares of the Funds are sold on a continuous basis by Stephens, as the Funds'
sponsor and distributor. Stephens is a registered broker/dealer with principal
offices at 111 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201. Nations Fund has
entered into a distribution agreement with Stephens which provides that Stephens
has the exclusive right to distribute shares of the Funds. Stephens may pay
service fees or commissions to selling agents that assist customers in
purchasing Investor C Shares of the Funds. See "Shareholder Servicing And
Distribution Plan."

 

NationsBank of Texas, N.A. (the "Custodian") serves as custodian for the Funds.
The Custodian is located at 1401 Elm Street, Dallas, Texas 75202 and is a wholly
owned subsidiary of NationsBank Corporation. In return for providing custodial
services, the Custodian is entitled to receive, in addition to out-of-pocket
expenses, fees payable monthly (i) at the rate of 1.25% of 1% of the average
daily net assets of each Fund, (ii) $10.00 per repurchase collateral transaction
by such Fund, and (iii) $15.00 per purchase, sale and maturity transaction
involving such Fund.

 

First Data serves as transfer agent (the "Transfer Agent") for the Funds'
Investor C Shares. The Transfer Agent is located at One Exchange Place, Boston,
Massachusetts 02109.

 
Price Waterhouse LLP serves as independent accountant to Nations Fund. Its
address is 160 Federal Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110.
 

EXPENSES: The accrued expenses of each Fund, as well as certain expenses
attributable to Investor C Shares, are deducted from accrued income before
dividends are declared. The Funds' expenses include, but are not limited to:
fees paid to the Adviser, NationsBank, Stephens and First Data; interest;
Trustees' fees; federal and state securities registration and qualification
fees; brokerage fees and commissions; costs of preparing and printing
prospectuses for regulatory purposes and for distribution to existing
shareholders; charges of the Custodian and Transfer Agent; certain insurance
premiums; outside auditing and legal expenses; costs of shareholder reports and
shareholder meetings; other expenses which are not expressly assumed by the
Adviser, NationsBank, Stephens or First Data under their respective agreements
with Nations Fund; and any extraordinary expenses. Investor C Shares bear
certain class specific retail transfer agency expenses and also bear certain
additional shareholder service and/or sales support costs. Any general expenses
of Nations Fund Trust that are not readily identifiable as belonging to a
particular investment portfolio are allocated among all portfolios in the
proportion that the assets of a portfolio bears to the assets of Nations Fund
Trust or in such other manner as the Board of Trustees deems appropriate.

 
12
 
<PAGE>
   Organization And History
 

The Funds are members of the Nations Fund Family, which consists of Nations Fund
Trust, Nations Fund, Inc., Nations Fund Portfolios, Inc. and Nations
Institutional Reserves. The Nations Fund Family currently consists of more than
43 distinct investment portfolios and total assets in excess of $18 billion.

 

NATIONS FUND TRUST: Nations Fund Trust was organized as a Massachusetts business
trust on May 6, 1985. Nations Fund Trust's fiscal year end is March 31; prior to
1996, Nations Fund Trust's fiscal year end was November 30. The Funds currently
offer four classes of shares -- Primary A Shares, Primary B Shares, Investor A
Shares and Investor C Shares. This Prospectus relates only to the Investor C
Shares of Nations Managed Index Fund and Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund. To
obtain additional information regarding the Funds' other classes of shares which
may be available to you, contact your Agent (as defined below) or Nations Fund
at 1-800-321-7854.

 
Each share of Nations Fund Trust is without par value, represents an equal
proportionate interest in the related fund with other shares of the same class,
and is entitled to such dividends and distributions out of the income earned on
the assets belonging to such fund as are declared in the discretion of Nations
Fund Trust's Board of Trustees. Nations Fund Trust's Declaration of Trust
authorizes the Board of Trustees to classify or reclassify any class of shares
into one or more series of shares.
 
Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each full share held and a
proportionate fractional vote for each fractional share held. Shareholders of
each fund of Nations Fund Trust will vote in the aggregate and not by fund, and
shareholders of each fund will vote in the aggregate and not by class except as
otherwise expressly required by law or when the Board of Trustees determines
that the matter to be voted on affects only the interests of shareholders of a
particular fund or class. See Nations Fund Trust's SAI for examples of when the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act") requires voting by fund.
 

As of October 15, 1996, NationsBank and its affiliates possessed or shared power
to dispose or vote with respect to more than 25% of the outstanding shares of
certain classes of shares of Nations Fund Trust and therefore could be
considered to be a controlling person of these classes and series of Nations
Fund Trust for purposes of the 1940 Act. For more detailed information
concerning the percentage of each class or series of shares over which
NationsBank and its affiliates possessed or shared power to dispose or vote as
of a certain date, see Nations Fund Trust's SAI.

 
Nations Fund Trust does not presently intend to hold annual meetings except as
required by the 1940 Act. Shareholders will have the right to remove Trustees.
Nations Fund Trust's Code of Regulations provides that special meetings of
shareholders shall be called at the written request of the shareholders entitled
to vote at least 10% of the outstanding shares of Nations Fund Trust entitled to
be voted at such meeting.
 
                                                                              13
 
<PAGE>
About Your Investment
 
   How To Buy Shares
 

The Funds have established various procedures for purchasing Investor C Shares
in order to accommodate different investors. Purchase orders for Investor C
Shares may be placed through banks, broker/dealers or other financial
institutions (including certain affiliates of NationsBank) that have entered
into a shareholder servicing agreement ("Servicing Agreement") with Nations Fund
("Servicing Agents") and/or a Sales Support Agreement") with Stephens ("Selling
Agents").

 
There is a minimum initial investment of $1,000, except that the minimum initial
investment is:
 
(Bullet) $500 for "IRA" investors;
 
(Bullet) $250 for non-working spousal IRAs; and
 
(Bullet) $100 for investors participating on a monthly basis in the Systematic
         Investment Plan described below.
 
There is no minimum investment amount for investments by 401(k) plans,
simplified employee pension plans ("SEPs"), salary reduction-simplified employee
pension plans ("SAR-SEPs") or salary reduction-Individual Retirement Account
("SAR-IRAs"). However, the assets of such plans must reach an asset value of
$1,000 ($500 for SEPs, SAR-SEPs and SAR-IRAs) within one year of the account
open date. If the assets of such plans do not reach the minimum asset size
within one year, Nations Fund reserves the right to redeem the shares held by
such plans on 60 days' written notice. The minimum subsequent investment is
$100, except for investments pursuant to the Systematic Investment Plan
described below.
 
Investor C Shares are purchased at net asset value per share. Purchases may be
effected on days on which the New York Stock Exchange (the "Exchange") is open
for business (a "Business Day").
 
The Servicing Agents will provide various shareholder services for, and the
Selling Agents will provide sales support assistance to, their respective
customers ("Customers") who own Investor C Shares. Servicing Agents and Selling
Agents are sometimes referred to hereafter as "Agents." From time to time the
Agents, Stephens and Nations Fund may agree to voluntarily reduce the maximum
fees payable for sales support or shareholder services.
 

Nations Fund reserves the right to reject any purchase order. The issuance of
Investor C Shares is recorded on the books of the Funds, and share certificates
are not issued unless expressly requested in writing. Certificates are not
issued for fractional shares.

 

EFFECTIVE TIME OF PURCHASES: Purchase orders for Investor C Shares of the Funds
which are received by Stephens or by the Transfer Agent before the close of
regular trading hours on the Exchange (currently 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) on any
Business Day are priced according to the net asset value determined on that day
but are not executed until 4:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the Business Day on which
immediately available funds in payment of the purchase price are received by the
Funds' Custodian. Such payment must be received no later than 4:00 p.m., Eastern
time, by the third Business Day following receipt of the order. If funds are not
received by such date, the order will not be accepted and notice thereof will be
given to the Agent placing the order. Payment for orders which are not received
or accepted will be returned after prompt inquiry to the sending Agent.

 
The Agents are responsible for transmitting orders for purchases of Investor C
Shares by their Customers, and delivering required funds, on a timely basis.
Stephens is responsible for transmitting orders it receives to Nations Fund.
 

14
 
<PAGE>

SYSTEMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN: Under the Funds' Systematic Investment Plan ("SIP")
a shareholder may automatically purchase Investor C Shares. On a bi-monthly,
monthly or quarterly basis, a shareholder may direct cash to be transferred
automatically from his/her checking or savings account at any bank to his/her
Fund account. Transfers will occur on or about the 15th and/or 30th day of the
applicable month. The systematic investment amount may be in any amount from $25
to $100,000. For more information concerning the SIP, contact your Agent.

 
TELEPHONE TRANSACTIONS: Investors may effect purchases, redemptions (up to
$50,000) and exchanges by telephone. See "How To Redeem Shares" and "How To
Exchange Shares" below. If a shareholder desires to elect the telephone
transaction feature after opening an account, a signature guarantee will be
required. Shareholders should be aware that by using the telephone transaction
feature, such shareholders may be giving up a measure of security that they may
have if they were to authorize written requests only. A shareholder may bear the
risk of any resulting losses from a telephone transaction. Nations Fund will
employ reasonable procedures to confirm that instructions communicated by
telephone are genuine, and if Nations Fund and its service providers fail to
employ such measures, they may be liable for any losses due to unauthorized or
fraudulent instructions. Nations Fund requires a form of personal identification
prior to acting upon instructions received by telephone and provides written
confirmation to shareholders of each telephone share transaction. In addition,
Nations Fund reserves the right to record all telephone conversations.
 
   How To Redeem Shares
 

Redemption orders should be transmitted by telephone or in writing through the
same Agent that transmitted the original purchase order. Redemption orders are
effected at the net asset value per share next determined after receipt of the
order by Stephens or by the Transfer Agent, less any applicable Contingent
Deferred Sales Charge ("CDSC"). The Agents are responsible for transmitting
redemption orders to Stephens or to the Transfer Agent and for crediting their
Customers' accounts with the redemption proceeds on a timely basis. No charge
for wiring redemption payments is imposed by Nations Fund. Except for any CDSC
which may be applicable upon redemption of Investor C Shares, as described
below, there is no redemption charge.

 
Redemption proceeds are normally wired to the redeeming Agent within three
Business Days after receipt of the order by Stephens or by the Transfer Agent.
However, redemption proceeds for shares purchased by check may not be remitted
until at least 15 days after the date of purchase to ensure that the check has
cleared; a certified check, however, is deemed to be cleared immediately.
 

Nations Fund may redeem a shareholder's Investor C Shares upon 60 days' written
notice if the balance in the shareholder's account drops below $500 as a result
of redemptions. Share balances also may be redeemed at the direction of an Agent
pursuant to arrangements between the Agent and its Customers. Nations Fund also
may redeem shares of the Funds involuntarily or make payment for redemption in
readily marketable securities or other property under certain circumstances in
accordance with the 1940 Act.

 
Prior to effecting a redemption of Investor C Shares represented by
certificates, the Transfer Agent must have received such certificates at its
principal office. All such certificates must be endorsed by the redeeming
shareholder or accompanied by a signed stock power, in each instance with the
signature guaranteed by a commercial bank or a member of a major stock exchange,
unless other arrangements satisfactory to Nations Fund have previously been
made. Nations Fund may require any additional
 
                                                                              15
 
<PAGE>
information reasonably necessary to evidence that a redemption has been duly
authorized.
 

CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE: Subject to certain waivers, Investor C Shares
of the Funds that are redeemed within one year of the date of purchase may be
subject to a CDSC equal to 0.50% of the lesser of the net asset value or the
purchase price of the shares being redeemed. No CDSC is imposed on increases in
net asset value above the initial purchase price, including shares acquired by
reinvestment of distributions.

 
Solely for purposes of determining the period of time that has elapsed from the
purchase of any Investor C Shares, all purchases are deemed to have been made on
the trade date of the transaction. In determining whether a CDSC is applicable
to a redemption, the calculation will be made in the manner that results in the
lowest possible charge being assessed. In this regard, it will be assumed that
the redemption is first of shares held for the longest period of time or shares
acquired pursuant to reinvestment of dividends or distributions. The charge will
not be applied to dollar amounts representing an increase in the net asset value
since the time of purchase.
 
The CDSC will be waived on redemptions of Investor C Shares (i) following the
death or disability (as defined in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended
(the "Code")) of a shareholder (including a registered joint owner), (ii) in
connection with the following retirement plan distributions: (a) by qualified
plans, (except in cases of plan level terminations); (b) distributions from an
IRA following attainment of age 59 1/2; (c) a tax-free return of an excess
contribution to an IRA, and (d) distributions from a qualified retirement plan
that are not subject to the 10% additional Federal withdrawal tax pursuant to
Section 72(t)(2) of the Code, (iii) effected pursuant to Nations Fund's right to
liquidate a shareholder's account, including instances where the aggregate net
asset value of the Investor C shares held in the account is less than the
minimum account size, (iv) in connection with the combination of Nations Fund
with any other registered investment company by merger, acquisition of assets or
by any other transaction, and (v) effected pursuant to the Automatic Withdrawal
Plan discussed below, provided that such redemptions do not exceed, on an annual
basis, 12% of the net asset value of the Investor C Shares in the account.
Shareholders are responsible for providing evidence sufficient to establish that
they are eligible for any waiver of the CDSC. Nations Fund may terminate any
waiver of the CDSC by providing notice in the Funds' Prospectus, but any such
termination would affect only shares purchased after such termination.
 
Within 120 days after a redemption of Investor C Shares of a Fund, a shareholder
may reinvest any portion of the proceeds of such redemption in Investor C Shares
of the same Fund. The amount which may be so reinvested is limited to an amount
up to, but not exceeding, the redemption proceeds (or to the nearest full share
if fractional shares are not purchased). A shareholder exercising this privilege
would receive a pro rata credit for any CDSC paid in connection with the prior
redemption. A shareholder may not exercise this privilege with the proceeds of a
redemption of shares previously purchased through the reinvestment privilege. In
order to exercise this privilege, a written order for the purchase of Investor C
Shares must be received by the Transfer Agent or by Stephens within 120 days
after the redemption.
 

AUTOMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN: An Automatic Withdrawal Plan ("AWP") may be
established by a new or existing shareholder of the Funds if the value of the
Investor C Shares in his/her accounts within the Nations Fund Family (valued at
the net asset value at the time of the establishment of the AWP) equals $10,000
or more. Investor C Shares redeemed under the AWP will not be subject to a CDSC,
provided that the shares so redeemed do not exceed, on an annual basis, 12% of
the net asset value of the Investor C Shares in the account. Otherwise, any
applicable CDSC will be imposed on shares redeemed under the AWP. Shareholders
who elect to establish an AWP may receive a monthly, quarterly or annual check
or automatic transfer to a checking or savings account in a stated amount of not
less than $25 on or about the 10th or 25th day of the applicable month of
withdrawal. Investor C Shares will be redeemed (net of any applicable CDSC) as
necessary to

 
16
 
<PAGE>
meet withdrawal payments. Withdrawals will reduce principal and may eventually
deplete the shareholder's account. If a shareholder desires to establish an AWP
after opening an account, a signature guarantee will be required. An AWP may be
terminated by a shareholder on 30 days' written notice to his/her Agent or by
Nations Fund at any time.
 
   How To Exchange Shares
 
The exchange feature enables a shareholder of Investor C Shares of a Nations
Fund non-money market fund to acquire shares of the same class that are offered
by another non-money market fund of Nations Fund or Investor D Shares of any
Nations Fund money market fund when he or she believes that a shift between
funds is an appropriate investment decision. A qualifying exchange is based on
the next calculated net asset value per share of each fund after the exchange
order is received.
 
No CDSC will be imposed in connection with an exchange of Investor C Shares that
meets the requirements discussed in this section.
 
If a shareholder acquired Investor C Shares of a Nations Fund non-money market
fund or Investor D Shares of a Nations Fund money market fund through an
exchange, the CDSC applicable to the original shares purchased will be applied
to any redemption of the acquired shares. Additionally, when an investor
exchanges Investor C Shares of a Nations Fund non-money market fund for shares
of the same class of another non-money market fund or Investor D Shares of any
money market fund of Nations Fund, the remaining period of time (if any) that
the CDSC is in effect will be computed from the time of the initial purchase of
the previously held Investor C Shares.
 
AUTOMATIC EXCHANGE FEATURE: Under the Funds' Automatic Exchange Feature ("AEF")
a shareholder may automatically exchange at least $25 on a monthly or quarterly
basis. A shareholder may direct proceeds to be exchanged from one Nations Fund
to another as allowed by the applicable exchange rules within the prospectus.
Exchanges will occur on or about the 15th or 30th day of the applicable month.
The shareholder must have an existing position in both Funds in order to
establish the AEF. This feature may be established by directing a request to the
Transfer Agent by telephone or in writing. For additional information, an
investor should contact his/her Selling Agent.
 

GENERAL: The Funds and each of the other funds of Nations Fund may limit the
number of times this exchange feature may be exercised by a shareholder within a
specified period of time. Also, the exchange feature may be terminated or
revised at any time by Nations Fund upon such notice as may be required by
applicable regulatory agencies (presently 60 days for termination or material
revision), absent unusual circumstances.

 
The current prospectus for each fund of Nations Fund describes its investment
objective and policies, and shareholders should obtain a copy and examine it
carefully before investing. Exchanges are subject to the minimum investment
requirement and any other conditions imposed by each fund. In the case of any
shareholder holding a share certificate or certificates, no exchanges may be
made until all applicable share certificates have been received by the Transfer
Agent and deposited in the shareholder's account. An exchange will be treated
for Federal income tax purposes the same as a redemption of shares, on which the
shareholder may realize a capital gain or loss. However, the ability to deduct
capital losses on an exchange may be limited in situations where there is an
exchange of shares within 90 days after the shares are purchased.
 
The Investor C Shares exchanged must have a current value of at least $1,000
(except for exchange through the AEF). Nations Fund reserves the right to reject
any exchange request. Only shares that may legally be sold in the state of the
investor's residence may be acquired in an exchange. Only shares of a class that
is accepting investments generally may be
 
                                                                              17
 
<PAGE>
acquired in an exchange. An investor may telephone an exchange request by
calling his/her Agent which is responsible for transmitting such request to
Stephens or to the Transfer Agent.
 
During periods of significant economic or market change, telephone exchanges may
be difficult to complete. In such event, shares may be exchanged by mailing the
request directly to the Agent through which the original shares were purchased.
An investor should consult his/her Agent or Stephens for further information
regarding exchanges.
 
   Shareholder Servicing And Distribution
   Plans
 

Pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act, the Trustees have approved a
Distribution Plan with respect to Investor C Shares of the Funds. Pursuant to
the Distribution Plan, the Funds may compensate or reimburse Stephens for any
activities or expenses primarily intended to result in the sale of the Funds'
Investor C Shares. Payments under the Investor C Distribution Plan will be
calculated daily and paid monthly at a rate or rates set from time to time by
the Trustees, provided that the annual rate may not exceed 0.75% of the average
daily net asset value of the Funds' Investor C Shares.

 
The fees payable under the Distribution Plan are used (i) to compensate Selling
Agents for providing sales support assistance relating to Investor C Shares,
(ii) to pay for promotional activities intended to result in the sale of
Investor C Shares such as the preparation, printing and distribution of
prospectuses to other than current shareholders, and (iii) to compensate Selling
Agents for providing sales support services with respect to their Customers who
are, from time to time, beneficial and record holders of Investor C Shares.
Currently, substantially all fees paid pursuant to the Distribution Plan are
paid to compensate Selling Agents for providing the services described in (i)
and (iii) above, with any remaining amounts being used by Stephens to partially
defray other expenses incurred by Stephens in distributing Investor C Shares.
Fees received by Stephens pursuant to the Distribution Plan will not be used to
pay any interest expenses, carrying charges or other financing costs (except to
the extent permitted by the SEC) and will not be used to pay any general and
administrative expenses of Stephens.
 
Nations Fund and Stephens may suspend or reduce payments under the Distribution
Plan at any time, and payments are subject to the continuation of the
Distribution Plan described above and the terms of the Sales Support Agreement
between Selling Agents and Stephens. See the SAI for more details on the
Distribution Plan.
 

The Trustees also have approved a shareholder servicing plan ("Servicing Plan")
for the Funds which permits the Funds to compensate Servicing Agents for
services provided to their Customers that own Investor C Shares. Payments under
the Servicing Plan are calculated daily and paid monthly at a rate or rates set
from time to time by the Funds, provided that the annual rate may not exceed
0.25% of the average daily net asset value of the Funds' Investor C Shares.

 

The fees payable under the Servicing Plan are used primarily to compensate or
reimburse Servicing Agents for shareholder services provided, and related
expenses incurred, by such Servicing Agents. The shareholder services provided
by Servicing Agents may include: (i) aggregating and processing purchase and
redemption requests for Investor C Shares from Customers and transmitting net
purchase and redemption orders to Stephens or the Transfer Agent; (ii) providing
Customers with a service that invests the assets of their accounts in Investor C
Shares pursuant to specific or preauthorized instructions; (iii) processing
dividend and distribution payments from the Funds on behalf of

 
18
 
<PAGE>
Customers; (iv) providing information periodically to Customers showing their
positions in Investor C Shares; (v) arranging for bank wires; and (vi) providing
general shareholder liaison services.
 
Nations Fund may suspend or reduce payments under the Servicing Plan at any
time, and payments are subject to the continuation of the Servicing Plan
described above and the terms of the Servicing Agreements. See the SAI for more
details on the Servicing Plan.
 
Nations Fund understands that Agents may charge fees to their Customers who are
the owners of Investor C Shares for various services provided in connection with
Customers' accounts. These fees would be in addition to any amounts received by
a Selling Agent under its Sales Support Agreement with Stephens or by a
Servicing Agent under its Servicing Agreement with Nations Fund. The Sales
Support Agreements and Servicing Agreements require Agents to disclose to their
Customers any compensation payable to the Agent by Stephens or Nations Fund and
any other compensation payable by the Customers for various services provided in
connection with their accounts. Customers should read this Prospectus in light
of the terms governing their accounts with their Agents.
 

Stephens may, from time to time, at its expense or as an expense for which it
may be reimbursed under the Distribution Plan, pay a bonus or other
consideration or incentive to Agents who sell a minimum dollar amount of shares
of the Funds during a specified period of time. Stephens also may, from time to
time, pay additional consideration to Agents not to exceed 0.75% of the offering
price per share on all sales of Investor C Shares as an expense of Stephens or
for which Stephens may be reimbursed under the Distribution Plan or upon receipt
of a CDSC. Any such additional consideration or incentive program may be
terminated at any time by Stephens.

 

In addition, Stephens has established a non-cash compensation program, pursuant
to which broker/dealers or financial institutions that sell shares of the Funds
may earn additional compensation in the form of trips to sales seminars or
vacation destinations, tickets to sporting events, theater or other
entertainment, opportunities to participate in golf or other outings and gift
certificates for meals or merchandise. This non-cash compensation program may be
amended or terminated at any time by Stephens.

 

   How The Funds Value Their Shares

 

The Funds calculate the net asset value of a share of each class by dividing the
total value of its assets, less liabilities, by the number of shares in the
class outstanding. Shares are valued as of the close of regular trading on the
Exchange (currently 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) on each Business Day. Currently,
the days on which the Exchange is closed (other than weekends) are: New Year's
Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day (observed), Independence Day,
Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day.

 
Portfolio securities for which market quotations are readily available are
valued at market value. Short-term investments that will mature in 60 days or
less are valued at amortized cost, which approximates market value. All other
securities and assets are valued at their fair value following procedures
approved by the Trustees.
 
                                                                              19
 
<PAGE>
   How Dividends And Distributions Are
   Made; Tax Information
 

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Even though the Funds seek to manage taxable
distributions, the Funds may be expected to earn and distribute taxable income
and may also be expected to realize and distribute capital gains from time to
time. Dividends from net investment income are declared and paid each calendar
quarter by the Funds. The Funds' net realized capital gains (including net
short-term capital gains) are distributed at least annually.

 

Investor C Shares of the Funds are eligible to receive dividends when declared,
provided however, that the purchase order for such shares is received at least
one day prior to the dividend declaration and such shares continue to be
eligible for dividends through and including the day before the redemption order
is executed.

 
The net asset value of Investor C Shares will be reduced by the amount of any
dividend or distribution. Certain Agents may provide for the reinvestment of
dividends in the form of additional Investor C Shares of the same class in the
same Fund. Dividends and distributions are paid in cash within five Business
Days of the end of the quarter to which the dividend relates. Dividends and
distributions payable to a shareholder are paid in cash within five Business
Days after a shareholder's complete redemption of his/her Investor C Shares.
 

TAX INFORMATION: Each Fund intends to qualify as a "regulated investment
company" under the Code. Such qualification relieves a Fund of liability for
Federal income tax on amounts distributed in accordance with the Code.

 

Each Fund intends to distribute substantially all of its investment company
taxable income and net tax-exempt income each taxable year. Distributions by a
Fund of its net investment income and the excess, if any, of its net short-term
capital gain over its net long-term capital loss are taxable as ordinary income
to shareholders who are not currently exempt from Federal income tax, whether
such income is received in cash or reinvested in additional shares.

 

Corporate investors in a Fund may be entitled to the dividends-received
deduction on all or a portion of such Fund's dividends.

 

Substantially all of the Funds' net realized long-term capital gains will be
distributed at least annually. The Funds will generally have no tax liability
with respect to such gains, and the distributions will be taxable to
shareholders who are not exempt from Federal income taxes as long-term capital
gains, regardless of how long the shareholders have held such Funds' shares and
whether such gains are received in cash or reinvested in additional shares.

 
Each year, shareholders will be notified as to the amount and Federal tax status
of all dividends and capital gains paid during the prior year. Such dividends
and capital gains may be subject to state and local taxes.
 

Dividends declared in October, November, or December of any year payable to
shareholders of record on a specified date in such months will be deemed to have
been received by shareholders and paid by a Fund on December 31 of such year in
the event such dividends are actually paid during January of the following year.

 
Federal law requires Nations Fund to withhold 31% from any dividends (other than
exempt-interest dividends) paid by Nations Fund and/or redemptions (including
exchange redemptions) that occur in certain shareholder accounts if the
shareholder has not properly furnished a certified correct Taxpayer
Identification Number and has not certified that withholding does not apply, or
if the Internal Revenue Service has notified Nations Fund that the Taxpayer
Identification Number listed on a shareholder account is incorrect according to
its records, or that the shareholder is subject to backup withholding. Amounts
withheld are applied to the shareholder's Federal tax liability, and a refund
may
 
20
 
<PAGE>

be obtained from the Internal Revenue Service if withholding results in
overpayment of taxes. Federal law also requires the Funds to withhold 30% or the
applicable tax treaty rate from dividends paid to certain nonresident alien,
non-U.S. partnership and non-U.S. corporation shareholder accounts.

 

The foregoing discussion is based on tax laws and regulations which were in
effect as of the date of this Prospectus and summarizes only some of the
important Federal tax considerations generally affecting the Funds and their
shareholders. It is not intended as a substitute for careful tax planning;
investors should consult their tax advisors with respect to their specific tax
situations as well as with respect to state and local taxes. Further tax
information is contained in the SAI.

 
   Appendix A -- Portfolio Securities
 

The following are summary descriptions of certain types of instruments in which
a Fund may invest. The "How Objectives Are Pursued" section of the Prospectus
identifies each Fund's permissible investments, and the SAI contains more
information concerning such investments.

 

BANK INSTRUMENTS: Bank instruments consist mainly of certificates of deposit,
time deposits and bankers' acceptances. The Funds will limit their investments
in bank obligations so they do not exceed 25% of each Fund's total assets at the
time of purchase.

 

BORROWINGS: When a Fund borrows money, the net asset value of a share may be
subject to greater fluctuation until the borrowing is paid off. The Funds may
borrow money from banks for temporary purposes in amounts of up to one-third of
their respective total assets, provided that borrowings in excess of 5% of the
value of the Fund's total assets must be repaid prior to the purchase of
portfolio securities. Under the requirements of the 1940 Act, the Funds are
required to maintain an asset coverage (including the proceeds of the
borrowings) of at least 300% of all borrowings.


COMMERCIAL INSTRUMENTS: Commercial instruments consist of short-term U.S.
dollar-denominated obligations issued by domestic corporations or foreign
corporations and foreign commercial banks. Investments by a Fund in commercial
paper will consist of issues rated in a manner consistent with such Fund's
investment policies and objective. In addition, a Fund may acquire unrated
commercial paper and corporate bonds that are determined by the Adviser at the
time of purchase to be of comparable quality to rated instruments that may be
acquired by a Fund. Commercial instruments include variable-rate master demand
notes, which are unsecured instruments that permit the indebtedness thereunder
to vary and provide for periodic adjustments in the interest rate, and variable-
and floating-rate instruments.

 

CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES, PREFERRED STOCK, AND WARRANTS: The Funds may invest in
debt securities convertible into or exchangeable for equity securities,
preferred stocks or warrants. Preferred stocks are securities that represent an
ownership interest in a corporation providing the owner with claims on a
company's earnings and assets before common stock owners, but after bond or
other debt security owners. Warrants are options to buy a stated number of
shares of common stock at a specified price any time during the life of the
warrants.

 

FUTURES, OPTIONS AND OTHER DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS: The Funds may attempt to
reduce the overall level of investment risk of particular securities and attempt
to protect a Fund against adverse market movements by investing in futures,
options and other derivative instruments. These include the purchase and writing
of options on securities (including index options), and investing in futures
contracts for the purchase or sale of instruments based on financial indices,
including interest rate indices or indices of U.S. Government, equity or fixed
income securities ("futures contracts"), options on futures contracts, forward
contracts and

 
                                                                              21
 
<PAGE>
swaps and swap-related products such as interest rate swaps, currency swaps,
caps, collars and floors.
 

The use of futures, options, forward contracts and swaps exposes a Fund to
additional investment risks and transaction costs. If the Adviser incorrectly
analyzes market conditions or does not employ the appropriate strategy with
respect to these instruments, a Fund could be left in a less favorable position.
Additional risks inherent in the use of futures, options, forward contracts and
swaps include: imperfect correlation between the price of futures, options and
forward contracts and movements in the prices of the securities or currencies
being hedged; the possible absence of a liquid secondary market for any
particular instrument at any time; and the possible need to defer closing out
certain hedged positions to avoid adverse tax consequences. A Fund may not
purchase put and call options which are traded on a national stock exchange in
an amount exceeding 5% of its net assets. Further information on the use of
futures, options and other derivative instruments, and the associated risks, is
contained in the SAI.

 

ILLIQUID SECURITIES: Certain securities may be sold only pursuant to certain
legal restrictions, and may be difficult to sell. The Funds will not hold more
than 15% of the value of their respective net assets in securities that are
illiquid or such lower percentage as may be required by the states in which the
appropriate Fund sells its shares. Repurchase agreements, time deposits and
guaranteed investment contracts that do not provide for payment to a Fund within
seven days after notice, and illiquid restricted securities are subject to the
limitation on illiquid securities.

 

If otherwise consistent with its investment objective and policies, certain
Funds may purchase securities that are not registered under the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended (the "1933 Act") but which can be sold to "qualified
institutional buyers" in accordance with Rule 144A under the 1933 Act, or which
were issued under Section 4(2) of the 1933 Act. Any such security will not be
considered illiquid so long as it is determined by a Fund's Board of Trustees or
the Adviser, acting under guidelines approved and monitored by such Fund's
Board, after considering trading activity, availability of reliable price
information and other relevant information that an adequate trading market
exists for that security. To the extent that, for a period of time, qualified
institutional or other buyers cease purchasing such restricted securities
pursuant to Rule 144A or otherwise, the level of illiquidity of a Fund holding
such securities may increase during such period.

 
MONEY MARKET INSTRUMENTS: The term "money market instruments" refers to
instruments with remaining maturities of one year or less. Money market
instruments may include, among other instruments, certain U.S. Treasury
obligations, U.S. Government obligations, bank instruments, commercial
instruments, repurchase agreements and municipal securities. Such instruments
are described in this Appendix A.
 

OTHER INVESTMENT COMPANIES: Each Fund may invest in securities issued by other
investment companies to the extent that such investments are consistent with the
Fund's investment objective and policies and permissible under the 1940 Act. As
a shareholder of another investment company, a Fund would bear, along with other
shareholders, its pro rata portion of the other investment company's expenses,
including advisory fees. These expenses would be in addition to the advisory and
other expenses that a Fund bears directly in connection with its own operations.

 

REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS: A repurchase agreement involves the purchase of a
security by a Fund and a simultaneous agreement (generally with a bank or
broker/dealer) to repurchase that security from the Fund at a specified price
and date or upon demand. This technique offers a method of earning income on
idle cash. A risk associated with repurchase agreements is the failure of the
seller to repurchase the securities as agreed, which may cause a Fund to suffer
a loss if the market value of such securities declines before they can be
liquidated on the open market. Repurchase agreements with a duration of more
than seven days are considered illiquid securities and are subject to the limit
stated above. A Fund may enter into repurchase agreements jointly with other
investment portfolios of Nations Fund.

 
22
 
<PAGE>

SECURITIES LENDING: To increase return on portfolio securities, the Funds may
lend their portfolio securities to broker/dealers and other institutional
investors pursuant to agreements requiring that the loans be continuously
secured by collateral equal at all times in value to at least the market value
of the securities loaned. There is a risk of delay in receiving collateral or in
recovering the securities loaned or even a loss of rights in the collateral
should the borrower of the securities fail financially. However, loans are made
only to borrowers deemed by the Adviser to be credit worthy and when, in its
judgment, the income to be earned from the loan justifies the attendant risks.
The aggregate of all outstanding loans of a Fund may not exceed 30% of the value
of its total assets.


U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS: U.S. Government obligations consist of marketable
securities and instruments issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or any of
its agencies, authorities or instrumentalities. Direct obligations are issued by
the U.S. Treasury and include all U.S. Treasury instruments. U.S. Treasury
obligations differ only in their interest rates, maturities and time of
issuance. Obligations of U.S. Government agencies, authorities and
instrumentalities are issued by government-sponsored agencies and enterprises
acting under authority of Congress. Although obligations of federal agencies,
authorities and instrumentalities are not debts of the U.S. Treasury, some are
backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury, such as direct
pass-through certificates of the Government National Mortgage Association; some
are supported by the right of the issuer to borrow from the U.S. Government,
such as obligations of Federal Home Loan Banks, and some are backed only by the
credit of the issuer itself, such as obligations of the Federal National
Mortgage Association. No assurance can be given that the U.S. Government would
provide financial support to government-sponsored instrumentalities if it is not
obligated to do so by law. The market value of U.S. Government obligations may
fluctuate due to fluctuations in market interest rates. As a general matter, the
value of debt instruments, including U.S. Government obligations, declines when
market interest rates increase and rises when market interest rates decrease.
Certain types of U.S. Government obligations are subject to fluctuations in
yield or value due to their structure or contract terms.

WHEN-ISSUED, DELAYED DELIVERY AND FORWARD COMMITMENT SECURITIES: The purchase of
new issues of securities on a "when-issued," "delayed delivery" or "forward
commitment" basis occurs when the payment for and delivery of securities take
place at a future date. Because actual payment for and delivery of such
securities generally take place 15 to 45 days after the purchase date,
purchasers of such securities bear the risk that interest rates on debt
securities at the time of delivery may be higher or lower than those contracted
for on the security purchased.

                                                                              23
<PAGE>


                              NATIONS FUND TRUST

                       Statement of Additional Information

                      Nations Government Money Market Fund
                             Nations Tax Exempt Fund
                               Nations Value Fund
                           Nations Capital Growth Fund
                          Nations Emerging Growth Fund
                            Nations Equity Index Fund
                           Nations Managed Index Fund
                       Nations Managed SmallCap Index Fund
                         Nations Disciplined Equity Fund
                          Nations Balanced Assets Fund
                   Nations Short-Intermediate Government Fund
                         Nations Short-Term Income Fund
                         Nations Diversified Income Fund
                       Nations Strategic Fixed Income Fund
                          Nations Municipal Income Fund
                    Nations Short-Term Municipal Income Fund
                    Nations Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
                Nations Florida Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
                       Nations Florida Municipal Bond Fund
                Nations Georgia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
                       Nations Georgia Municipal Bond Fund
                Nations Maryland Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
                      Nations Maryland Municipal Bond Fund
             Nations North Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
                   Nations North Carolina Municipal Bond Fund
             Nations South Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
                   Nations South Carolina Municipal Bond Fund
               Nations Tennessee Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
                      Nations Tennessee Municipal Bond Fund
                 Nations Texas Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
                        Nations Texas Municipal Bond Fund
                Nations Virginia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
                      Nations Virginia Municipal Bond Fund

                       Investor Shares and Primary Shares
                                  July 31, 1996
                        Supplemented on November 7, 1996

         This Statement of Additional Information ("SAI") provides supplementary
information  pertaining to the classes of shares  representing  interests in the
above   listed   thirty-one   investment   portfolios   of  Nations  Fund  Trust
(individually,  a  "Fund"  and  collectively,  the  "Funds").  This SAI is not a
prospectus, and should be read only in conjunction with the current prospectuses
for the  aforementioned  Funds related to the class or series of shares in which
one is interested, dated July 31, 1996 (each a "Prospectus").  All terms used in
this  SAI that are  defined  in the  Prospectuses  will  have the same  meanings
assigned in the  Prospectuses.  Copies of these  Prospectuses may be obtained by
writing  Nations Fund,  c/o Stephens Inc., One  NationsBank  Plaza,  33rd Floor,
Charlotte, North Carolina 28255, or by calling Nations Funds at 1-800-321-7854.


<PAGE>



                                                    
                                TABLE OF CONTENTS


                                                                           Page

INTRODUCTION..............................................................   1

FUND TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE ..........................................   2

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON FUND INVESTMENTS................................   6
         Asset Backed Securities..........................................   6
         Commercial Instruments...........................................   10
         Repurchase Agreements............................................   11
         Reverse Repurchase Agreements....................................   11
         Lending Securities...............................................   11
         American Depositary Receipts.....................................   12
         Futures, Options and Other Derivative
               Instruments................................................   12
         When-Issued Purchases and Forward
               Commitments................................................   17
         Municipal Securities.............................................   17
         Insured Municipal Securities.....................................   45
         Real Estate Investment Trusts....................................   45
         Guaranteed Investment Contracts..................................   46
         Variable- and Floating- Rate
               Instruments................................................   46
         Stand-by Commitments.............................................   47
         Variable- and Floating-Rate Government
               Securities.................................................   48
         Lower Rated Debt Securities......................................   48
         Dollar Roll Transactions.........................................   50
         Foreign Currency Transactions....................................   50
         Interest Rate Transactions.......................................   51
         Illiquid Securities..............................................   52
         Other Securities.................................................   52
         Additional Investment Limitations................................   53

NET ASSET VALUE ..........................................................   55
         Money Market Funds...............................................   55
         Non-Money Market Funds...........................................   56
         Exchange Privilege...............................................   57

DESCRIPTION OF SHARES ....................................................   58
         Dividends and Distributions......................................   59

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONCERNING TAXES ..................................   60
         Federal Taxes - In General.......................................   60
                                        i
<PAGE>

         Excise Tax on Regulated Investment
               Companies..................................................   63
         Sale or Redemption of Shares.....................................   64
         Investment Strategy..............................................   65
         Tax Rates........................................................   65
         Foreign Shareholders.............................................   65
         Special Tax Considerations Pertaining to the Value,
               Capital Growth, Emerging Growth, Equity Index, Disciplined
               Equity, Managed Index, Balanced Assets, Short-Intermediate
               Government, Short-Term Income, Diversified Income and
               Strategic Fixed Income Funds ..............................   66
         Special Tax Considerations Pertaining to the Municipal
               Income, Short-Term Municipal Income, Intermediate
               Municipal Bond, State Intermediate Municipal Bond
               and the State Municipal Bond Funds.........................   67

TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS ....................................................   71
         Nations Funds Retirement Plan....................................   75
         Nations Funds Deferred Compensation Plan.........................   75
         Compensation Table...............................................   76
         Shareholder and Trustee Liability................................   77

INVESTMENT ADVISORY, ADMINISTRATION, CUSTODY,
TRANSFER AGENCY, SHAREHOLDER SERVICING, SHAREHOLDER ADMINISTRATION AND 
  DISTRIBUTION AGREEMENTS ................................................   77
         Investment Adviser...............................................   77
         Investment Styles................................................   85
         Administrator and Co-Administrator...............................   89
         Custodian and Transfer Agent.....................................   92
         Shareholder Servicing Agreements
               (Primary B Shares Only)....................................   93
         Shareholder Administration Plan
               (Primary B Shares Only)....................................   94
         Distribution Plans and Shareholder
              Servicing Arrangements for Investor Shares..................   95

DISTRIBUTOR ..............................................................   109

INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANT AND REPORTS........................................   110

COUNSEL...................................................................   110
                                       ii
<PAGE>


ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON PERFORMANCE ....................................   110
         Yield Calculations...............................................   110
         Total Return Calculations........................................   123

MISCELLANEOUS ............................................................   134
         Certain Record Holders...........................................   134

SCHEDULE A................................................................   A-1

SCHEDULE B................................................................   B-1

SCHEDULE C................................................................   C-1


                                       iii
<PAGE>



                                                        


                                  INTRODUCTION

         Nations  Fund Trust  ("Trust")  was  organized on May 6, 1985 under the
name "MarketMaster Trust," and in March 1992 changed its name to "Nations Fund,"
and in  September  1992  changed its name to "Nations  Fund  Trust." The Trust's
fiscal  year end is March 31;  prior to 1996,  the  Trust's  fiscal year end was
November 30.  NationsBanc  Advisors,  Inc. ("NBAI") is the investment adviser to
the  Funds.  TradeStreet  Investment  Associates,   Inc.  ("TradeStreet")  is  a
sub-investment  adviser.  As used  herein the  "Adviser"  shall mean NBAI and/or
TradeStreet as the context may require.

         Nations  Fund  Trust   currently   consists  of  thirty-two   different
investment portfolios. This SAI pertains to the Primary A (formerly called Trust
A), Primary B (formerly  called Trust B), Investor A, Investor B, Investor C and
Daily (formerly called Investor D) Shares of the following investment portfolios
of Nations Fund Trust:  Nations  Government Money Market Fund ("Government Money
Market Fund") and Nations Tax Exempt Fund ("Tax Exempt Fund") (collectively, the
"Money  Market  Funds") and the Primary A, Primary B, Investor A, Investor C and
Investor N Shares of Nations Value Fund ("Value  Fund"),  Nations Capital Growth
Fund ("Capital  Growth Fund"),  Nations  Emerging Growth Fund ("Emerging  Growth
Fund"),  Nations Equity Index Fund ("Equity Index Fund"),  Nations Managed Index
Fund  ("Managed  Index Fund"),  Nations  Managed  SmallCap  Index Fund ("Managed
SmallCap Index Fund"),  Nations  Disciplined  Equity Fund  ("Disciplined  Equity
Fund"),   Nations  Balanced  Assets  Fund  ("Balanced  Assets  Fund"),   Nations
Short-Intermediate  Government  Fund  ("Short-Intermediate   Government  Fund"),
Nations  Municipal Income Fund  ("Municipal  Income Fund"),  Nations  Short-Term
Municipal Income Fund ("Short-Term Municipal Income Fund"), Nations Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund  ("Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund"),  Nations  Short-Term
Income  Fund  ("Short-Term  Income  Fund"),   Nations  Diversified  Income  Fund
("Diversified  Income Fund"),  Nations  Strategic Fixed Income Fund  ("Strategic
Fixed Income Fund"),  Nations Florida Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund ("Florida
Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund"), Nations Georgia Intermediate Municipal Bond
Fund ("Georgia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund"), Nations Maryland Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund ("Maryland Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund"), Nations North
Carolina   Intermediate   Municipal  Bond  Fund  ("North  Carolina  Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund"),  Nations South Carolina Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund
("South  Carolina   Intermediate   Municipal  Bond  Fund"),   Nations  Tennessee
Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund ("Tennessee Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund"),
Nations Texas Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund ("Texas  Intermediate  Municipal
Bond  Fund"),  Nations  Virginia  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund  ("Virginia
Intermediate   Municipal  Bond  Fund"),  Nations  Florida  Municipal  Bond  Fund
("Florida  Municipal Bond Fund"),  Nations Georgia Municipal Bond Fund ("Georgia
Municipal Bond Fund"), Nations Maryland Municipal Bond Fund ("Maryland Municipal
Bond  Fund"),  Nations  North  Carolina  Municipal  Bond Fund  ("North  Carolina
Municipal  Bond  Fund"),  Nations  South  Carolina  Municipal  Bond Fund ("South
Carolina   Municipal  Bond  Fund"),   Nations  Tennessee   Municipal  Bond  Fund
("Tennessee  Municipal  Bond Fund"),  Nations Texas  Municipal Bond Fund ("Texas
Municipal  Bond Fund"),  and Nations  Virginia  Municipal  Bond Fund  ("Virginia
Municipal  Bond Fund")  (collectively,  "Non-Money  Market  Funds," and with the
Money Market Funds, the "Funds").  The Florida Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund,
Georgia Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund, Maryland Intermediate  Municipal Bond
Fund,   North  Carolina   Intermediate   Municipal  Bond  Fund,  South  Carolina
Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund, Tennessee  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund,
Texas Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and Virginia Intermediate Municipal Bond
Fund are sometimes  collectively  referred to herein as the ("State Intermediate
Municipal Bond Funds").  The Florida Municipal Bond Fund, Georgia Municipal Bond
Fund,  Maryland  Municipal Bond Fund, North Carolina  Municipal Bond Fund, South
Carolina  Municipal Bond Fund,

<PAGE>

Tennessee  Municipal Bond Fund, Texas Municipal Bond Fund and Virginia Municipal
Bond Fund are sometimes collectively referred to herein as the ("State Municipal
Bond Funds").  The Disciplined  Equity Fund was formerly called "Nations Special
Equity  Fund."  The  Primary  A Shares  and  Primary  B Shares  of the Funds are
sometimes collectively referred to as "Primary Shares." The Investor A, Investor
B,  Investor  C,  Daily  and  Investor  N  Shares  of the  Funds  are  sometimes
collectively referred to as "Investor Shares."

         As of the date of this SAI,  no shares of the  Managed  Index Fund have
been sold. As a result,  certain  financial  information and performance data is
not available and thus not included in this SAI.

         Much of the  information  contained in this SAI expands  upon  subjects
discussed  in the  Prospectuses.  No  investment  in Primary  Shares or Investor
Shares should be made without first reading the related Prospectuses.


                         FUND TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE

         Subject  to the  general  supervision  of the  Board of  Trustees,  the
Adviser is responsible  for, makes  decisions with respect to, and places orders
for all purchases and sales of portfolio securities for the Funds.

         Transactions on U.S. stock exchanges  involve the payment of negotiated
brokerage  commissions.  On exchanges on which  commissions are negotiated,  the
cost of transactions may vary among different  brokers.  Transactions on foreign
stock  exchanges  involve payment of brokerage  commissions  which are generally
fixed.

         Transactions in both foreign and domestic  over-the-counter markets are
generally   principal   transactions  with  dealers,   and  the  costs  of  such
transactions  involve dealer spreads  rather than  brokerage  commissions.  With
respect to over-the-counter  transactions,  the Trust, where possible, will deal
directly  with dealers who make a market in the  securities  involved  except in
those   circumstances  in  which  better  prices  and  execution  are  available
elsewhere.

         Securities  purchased  and  sold  by the  Non-Money  Market  Funds  are
generally traded in the  over-the-counter  market on a net basis (i.e.,  without
commission) through dealers, or otherwise involve transactions directly with the
issuer of an  instrument.  The cost of securities  purchased  from  underwriters
includes  an  underwriting  commission  or  concession,  and the prices at which
securities are purchased from and sold to dealers include a dealer's  mark-up or
mark-down.

         The Funds may participate,  if and when practicable, in bidding for the
purchase  of  portfolio  securities  directly  from an  issuer  in order to take
advantage of the lower purchase price available to members of a bidding group. A
Fund will engage in this practice,  however,  only

                                       2
<PAGE>

when the Adviser, in its sole discretion, believes such practice to be otherwise
in the Fund's interests.

         In executing  portfolio  transactions and selecting brokers or dealers,
the Adviser will seek to obtain the best overall terms  available for each Fund.
In assessing the best overall terms available for any  transaction,  the Adviser
shall consider factors deemed  relevant,  including the breadth of the market in
the security,  the price of the security,  the financial condition and execution
capability of the broker or dealer, and the reasonableness of the commission, if
any, both for the specific  transaction and on a continuing  basis.  The Adviser
may cause a Fund to pay a broker/dealer  which furnishes  brokerage and research
services  a higher  commission  than that  which  might be  charged  by  another
broker/dealer  for  effecting  the same  transaction,  provided that the Adviser
determines  in good faith that such  commission is reasonable in relation to the
value of the brokerage  and research  services  provided by such  broker/dealer,
viewed  in  terms  of  either  the   particular   transaction   or  the  overall
responsibilities  of the Adviser.  Such  brokerage and research  services  might
consist of reports and statistics  relating to specific companies or industries,
general  summaries of groups of stocks or bonds and their  comparative  earnings
and yields,  or broad  overviews of the stock,  bond, and government  securities
markets and the economy.

         Supplementary  research  information so received is in addition to, and
not in lieu of,  services  required to be  performed by the Adviser and does not
reduce  the  advisory  fees  payable by the Funds.  The Board of  Trustees  will
periodically  review the commissions  paid by the Funds to consider  whether the
commissions paid over representative  periods of time appear to be reasonable in
relation to the benefits  inuring to the Funds.  It is possible  that certain of
the supplementary research or other services received will primarily benefit one
or more  other  investment  companies  or other  accounts  for which  investment
discretion is exercised.  Conversely,  a Fund may be the primary  beneficiary of
the research or services received as a result of portfolio transactions effected
for such other account or investment company.

         Under Section 28(e) of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, an adviser
shall not be "deemed to have acted  unlawfully or to have breached its fiduciary
duty" solely  because under certain  circumstances  it has caused the account to
pay a higher  commission  than the lowest  available.  To obtain the  benefit of
Section  28(e),  an  adviser  must  make a good  faith  determination  that  the
commissions  paid are  "reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and
research  services  provided  . . . viewed in terms of  either  that  particular
transaction or its overall  responsibilities  with respect to the accounts as to
which it exercises  investment  discretion  and that the services  provided by a
broker  provide  an  adviser  with  lawful  and  appropriate  assistance  in the
performance of its investment  decision-making  responsibilities."  Accordingly,
the price to a Fund in any transaction may be less favorable than that available
from another  broker/dealer  if the difference is reasonably  justified by other
aspects of the portfolio execution services offered.

         Broker/dealers   utilized  by  the  Adviser  may  furnish  statistical,
research and other information or services which are deemed by the Adviser to be
beneficial to the Funds'  investment  programs.  Research services received from
brokers  supplement  the  Adviser's  own research and may include the  following
types of information:  statistical and background information on industry groups
and individual companies; forecasts and interpretations with respect to U.S. and


                                       3
<PAGE>

foreign economies,  securities, markets, specific industry groups and individual
companies;   information  on  political   developments;   portfolio   management
strategies;  performance  information on securities and  information  concerning
prices of securities;  and information  supplied by specialized  services to the
Adviser and to the Trust's Trustees with respect to the performance,  investment
activities and fees and expenses of other mutual funds.  Such information may be
communicated  electronically,  orally or in written form.  Research services may
also  include  the  providing  of  equipment   used  to   communicate   research
information,  the  arranging of meetings  with  management  of companies and the
providing of access to consultants who supply research information.

         The outside  research  assistance  is useful to the  Adviser  since the
brokers  utilized by the Adviser as a group tend to follow a broader universe of
securities  and other  matters  than the staff of the  Adviser  can  follow.  In
addition,  this  research  provides  the Adviser with a diverse  perspective  on
financial  markets.  Research  services  which are  provided  to the  Adviser by
brokers are available for the benefit of all accounts  managed or advised by the
Adviser. In some cases, the research services are available only from the broker
providing such services. In other cases, the research services may be obtainable
from alternative  sources in return for cash payments.  It is the opinion of the
Adviser that because the broker research  supplements rather than replaces their
research, the receipt of such research does not tend to decrease their expenses,
but tends to improve the quality of their  investment  advice.  However,  to the
extent that the Adviser would have purchased any such research services had such
services  not been  provided by brokers,  the  expenses of such  services to the
Adviser could be considered to have been reduced  accordingly.  Certain research
services  furnished by broker/dealers  may be useful to the Adviser with clients
other than the Funds.  Similarly,  any research services received by the Adviser
through the placement of portfolio transactions of other clients may be of value
to the Adviser in fulfilling its  obligations to the Funds. It is the opinion of
the Adviser that this material is beneficial in supplementing their research and
analysis;  and, therefore,  it may benefit the Trust by improving the quality of
the  Adviser's  investment  advice.  The advisory fees paid by the Trust are not
reduced because the Adviser receives such services.

         Some  broker/dealers  may  indicate  that  the  provision  of  research
services  is  dependent  upon the  generation  of  certain  specified  levels of
commissions and underwriting concessions by the Adviser's clients, including the
Funds.

         The Trust will not execute portfolio  transactions through, or purchase
or sell  portfolio  securities  from or to the  distributor,  the  Adviser,  the
administrator, or the co-administrator,  or their affiliates acting as principal
(including repurchase and reverse repurchase  agreements),  except to the extent
permitted by the Securities and Exchange  Commission  (the "SEC").  In addition,
the  Trust  will not give  preference  to  correspondents  of  NationsBank  N.A.
("NationsBank")   or  its  affiliates  with  respect  to  such  transactions  or
securities.  (However,  the Adviser is authorized to allocate  purchase and sale
orders for portfolio securities to certain financial institutions, including, in
the case of agency  transactions,  financial  institutions  which are affiliated
with  NationsBank or its  affiliates,  and to take into account the sale of Fund
shares if the  Adviser  believes  that the  quality of the  transaction  and the
commission are comparable to what they would be with other  qualified  brokerage
firms.) In addition, a Fund will not purchase securities during the existence of
any underwriting or selling group relating thereto of which the

                                       4
<PAGE>
 
distributor,  the Adviser,  administrator,  or the  co-administrator,  or any of
their affiliates,  is a member, except to the extent permitted by the SEC. Under
certain  circumstances,  the Funds  may be at a  disadvantage  because  of these
limitations in comparison  with other  investment  companies  which have similar
investment objectives but are not subject to such limitations.

         Certain affiliates of NationsBank  Corporation and its subsidiary banks
may have deposit,  loan or commercial  banking  relationships with the corporate
users of facilities financed by industrial  development revenue bonds or private
activity bonds purchased by the Tax Exempt Fund, the Municipal  Income Fund, the
Short-Term  Municipal  Income Fund,  the  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund, the
State Intermediate  Municipal Bond Funds and the State Municipal Bond Funds (the
"Tax-Free  Bond Funds").  NationsBank  or certain of its affiliates may serve as
trustee, tender agent, guarantor, placement agent, underwriter, or in some other
capacity, with respect to certain issues of municipal securities.  Under certain
circumstances,  the Tax-Free Bond Funds may purchase municipal securities from a
member of an  underwriting  syndicate in which an affiliate of  NationsBank is a
member.  The Trust has  adopted  procedures  pursuant  to Rule  10f-3  under The
Investment  Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act"), and intends to comply with the
requirements  of Rule 10f-3,  in  connection  with any  purchases  of  municipal
securities that may be subject to such Rule.

         Under the 1940 Act,  persons  affiliated  with the Trust are prohibited
from  dealing  with  the  Trust  as a  principal  in the  purchase  and  sale of
securities unless an exemptive order allowing such transactions is obtained from
the SEC. Each of the Funds may purchase securities from underwriting  syndicates
of  which  NationsBank  or any of  its  affiliates  is a  member  under  certain
conditions,  in accordance  with the provisions of a rule adopted under the 1940
Act and any  restrictions  imposed  by the  Board of  Governors  of the  Federal
Reserve System.

         NationsBank   has  agreed  to  maintain  its  policy  and  practice  of
conducting its trust department  independently of its commercial department.  In
making investment recommendations for the Funds, trust department personnel will
not inquire or take into consideration whether the issuer of securities proposed
for purchase or sale for those Funds'  accounts are customers of the  commercial
department. In dealing with commercial customers, the commercial department will
not inquire or take into consideration whether securities of those customers are
held by the Trust.

         Investment  decisions for each Fund are made  independently  from those
for the Trust's other investment  portfolios,  other investment  companies,  and
accounts advised or managed by the Adviser.  Such other  investment  portfolios,
investment companies, and accounts may also invest in the same securities as the
Funds. When a purchase or sale of the same security is made at substantially the
same  time  on  behalf  of one or  more  of the  Funds  and  another  investment
portfolio,  investment company, or account,  the transaction will be averaged as
to price and available investments allocated as to amount, in a manner which the
Adviser  believes  to be  equitable  to each  Fund  and  such  other  investment
portfolio,  investment  company or account.  In some instances,  this investment
procedure may adversely  affect the price paid or received by a Fund or the size
of the position  obtained or sold by the Fund.  To the extent  permitted by law,
the Adviser may aggregate  the  securities to be sold or purchased for the Funds
with those to be sold or purchased for other investment  portfolios,  investment
companies, or accounts in executing transactions.

                                       5
<PAGE>

         During the fiscal period ended March 31, 1996,  the Company did not pay
brokerage  commissions  to NationsBanc  Securities,  Inc.,  NationsBanc  Capital
Markets, Inc., Nations Securities or Stephens.

         As of the fiscal period ended March 31,1996,  the following  Funds held
the indicated  amounts of  securities  issued by the Trust's  indicated  regular
broker or dealer:  Balanced Assets Fund -- $1,591,550 of Dean Witter, Discover &
Company;  Value Fund -- $5,544,000 of Paine Webber Group,  Inc.; Equity Index --
$363, 881, $403,866,  and $308,534 of Dean Witter,  Discover & Company,  Merrill
Lynch and Co., Inc. and Morgan  Stanley  Group,  Inc.,  respectively.  As of the
fiscal period ended March 31, 1996,  all other Funds did not hold any securities
of the Company's regular brokers or dealers.

         The indicated Fund paid aggregate brokerage  commissions for the fiscal
years ended November 30, 1994 and 1995 and for the fiscal period ended March 31,
1996:  Balanced  Assets Fund - $425,294,  $439,292 and  $203,960,  respectively;
Capital  Growth  Fund  -  $1,819,367,  $1,108,838  and  $448,561,  respectively;
Disciplined Equity Fund - $282,046, $37,406 and $140,621, respectively; Emerging
Growth Fund - $179,737, $597,940 and $191,371, respectively; Equity Index Fund -
$24,399,  $53,646 and $8,151 respectively;  Value Fund - $2,099,352,  $2,847,170
and $396,611, respectively.

         The  portfolio   turnover  rates  described  in  the  Prospectuses  are
calculated by dividing the lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio  securities
for the year by the  monthly  average  value of the  portfolio  securities.  The
calculation  excludes all securities whose maturities at the time of acquisition
were one year or less.  Fund turnover may vary greatly from year to year as well
as within a particular  year, and may also be affected by the cash  requirements
for  redemptions  of shares and by  requirements  which enable a Fund to receive
certain favorable tax treatment.  Fund turnover will not be a limiting factor in
making portfolio decisions.


                   ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON FUND INVESTMENTS

Asset-Backed Securities

         In General.  Asset-backed  securities  arise  through  the  grouping by
governmental,   government-related,   and   private   organizations   of  loans,
receivables,  or  other  assets  originated  by  various  lenders.  Asset-backed
securities  consist  of  both  mortgage-and   non-mortgage   backed  securities.
Interests  in  pools  of  these  assets  may  differ  from  other  forms of debt
securities,  which  normally  provide for periodic  payment of interest in fixed
amounts with  principal  paid at maturity or specified  call dates.  Conversely,
asset-backed  securities  provide  periodic  payments  which may consist of both
interest and principal payments.

         The life of an asset-backed  security varies depending upon rate of the
prepayment of the underlying debt instruments. The rate of such prepayments will
be  a  function  of  current  market  interest  rates  and  other  economic  and
demographic factors. For example,  falling interest rates generally result in an
increase in the rate of  prepayments  of mortgage  loans while  rising  interest
rates generally decrease the rate of prepayments. An acceleration in prepayments
in response  to

                                       6
 
<PAGE>

sharply falling interest rates will shorten the security's  average maturity and
limit  the  potential  appreciation  in  the  security's  value  relative  to  a
conventional debt security. Consequently,  asset-backed securities may not be as
effective  in  locking  in high,  long-term  yields.  Conversely,  in periods of
sharply rising rates,  prepayments are generally slow, increasing the security's
average life and its potential for price depreciation.

         Mortgage-Backed  Securities.  Mortgage-backed  securities  represent an
ownership interest in a pool of mortgage loans.

         Mortgage pass-through  securities may represent participation interests
in pools of  residential  mortgage  loans  originated  by U.S.  governmental  or
private lenders and guaranteed,  to the extent provided in such  securities,  by
the U.S.  Government or one of its agencies,  authorities or  instrumentalities.
Such securities, which are ownership interests in the underlying mortgage loans,
differ from conventional debt securities,  which provide for periodic payment of
interest in fixed amounts  (usually  semi-annually)  and  principal  payments at
maturity or on specified call dates.  Mortgage  pass-through  securities provide
for monthly  payments  that are a  "pass-through"  of the monthly  interest  and
principal payments (including any prepayments) made by the individual  borrowers
on the pooled  mortgage  loans,  net of any fees paid to the  guarantor  of such
securities and the servicer of the underlying mortgage loans.

         The  guaranteed  mortgage  pass-through  securities in which a Fund may
invest may include those issued or guaranteed  by Government  National  Mortgage
Association  ("GNMA"),  by Federal National  Mortgage  Association  ("FNMA") and
Federal  Home  Loan  Mortgage  Corporation  ("FHLMC").   Such  Certificates  are
mortgage-backed  securities  which represent a partial  ownership  interest in a
pool of mortgage  loans issued by lenders such as mortgage  bankers,  commercial
banks and savings and loan  associations.  Such mortgage loans may have fixed or
adjustable rates of interest.

         The  average  life  of a  mortgage-backed  security  is  likely  to  be
substantially  less than the original  maturity of the mortgage pools underlying
the securities. Prepayments of principal by mortgagors and mortgage foreclosures
will usually result in the return of the greater part of principal  invested far
in advance of the maturity of the mortgages in the pool.

         The yield which will be earned on  mortgage-backed  securities may vary
from their coupon  rates for the  following  reasons:  (i)  Certificates  may be
issued at a premium or discount, rather than at par; (ii) Certificates may trade
in the secondary market at a premium or discount after issuance;  (iii) interest
is earned and  compounded  monthly which has the effect of raising the effective
yield earned on the Certificates;  and (iv) the actual yield of each Certificate
is  affected by the  prepayment  of  mortgages  included  in the  mortgage  pool
underlying  the  Certificates  and the rate at which  principal  so  prepaid  is
reinvested.  In addition,  prepayment of mortgages included in the mortgage pool
underlying a GNMA Certificate purchased at a premium may result in a loss to the
Fund.

         Mortgage-backed  securities  issued by private issuers,  whether or not
such  obligations  are subject to guarantees by the private  issuer,  may entail
greater risk than  obligations  directly or  indirectly  guaranteed  by the U.S.
Government.

                                       7
<PAGE>

         Collateralized  mortgage  obligations  or "CMOs"  are debt  obligations
collateralized by mortgage loans or mortgage pass-through securities (collateral
collectively   hereinafter  referred  to  as  "Mortgage  Assets").   Multi-class
pass-through securities are interests in a trust composed of Mortgage Assets and
all references herein to CMOs will include multi-class  pass-through securities.
Payments  of  principal  of  and  interest  on  the  Mortgage  Assets,  and  any
reinvestment  income thereon,  provide the funds to pay debt service on the CMOs
or make scheduled distribution on the multi-class pass-through securities.

         Moreover,  principal  prepayments on the Mortgage  Assets may cause the
CMOs to be retired  substantially  earlier than their stated maturities or final
distribution dates, resulting in a loss of all or part of the premium if any has
been paid.  Interest is paid or accrues on all classes of the CMOs on a monthly,
quarterly or semiannual basis.

         The  principal  and  interest  payments on the  Mortgage  Assets may be
allocated among the various classes of CMOs in several ways. Typically, payments
of principal, including any prepayments, on the underlying mortgages are applied
to the  classes  in the order of their  respective  stated  maturities  or final
distribution  dates,  so that no payment of principal is made on CMOs of a class
until  all CMOs of other  classes  having  earlier  stated  maturities  or final
distribution dates have been paid in full.

         Stripped mortgage-backed securities ("SMBS") are derivative multi-class
mortgage securities. A Fund will only invest in SMBS that are obligations backed
by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government. SMBS are usually structured
with  two  classes  that  receive  different  proportions  of the  interest  and
principal  distributions from a pool of mortgage assets. A Fund will only invest
in SMBS whose mortgage assets are U.S. Government obligations.

         A common  type of SMBS will be  structured  so that one class  receives
some of the interest and most of the principal from the mortgage  assets,  while
the  other  class  receives  most  of the  interest  and  the  remainder  of the
principal. If the underlying mortgage assets experience greater than anticipated
prepayments of principal, a Fund may fail to fully recoup its initial investment
in these securities.  The market value of any class which consists  primarily or
entirely of principal  payments  generally is unusually  volatile in response to
changes in interest rates.

         The  average  life  of  mortgage-backed   securities  varies  with  the
maturities of the underlying mortgage instruments. The average life is likely to
be  substantially  less  than  the  original  maturity  of  the  mortgage  pools
underlying  the  securities  as the  result of  mortgage  prepayments,  mortgage
refinancings,  or foreclosures.  The rate of mortgage prepayments, and hence the
average  life of the  certificates,  will be a function of the level of interest
rates,  general  economic  conditions,  the location and age of the mortgage and
other social and demographic conditions.  Such prepayments are passed through to
the  registered  holder  with the regular  monthly  payments  of  principal  and
interest and have the effect of reducing future payments. Estimated average life
will be  determined by the Adviser and used for the purpose of  determining  the
average weighted maturity and duration of the Funds.

         Non-Mortgage   Asset-Backed   Securities.   Non-mortgage   asset-backed
securities  include  interests in pools of  receivables,  such as motor  vehicle
installment  purchase  obligations and credit


                                       8
 
<PAGE>

card   receivables.   Such  securities  are  generally  issued  as  pass-through
certificates,  which represent undivided  fractional  ownership interests in the
underlying pools of assets. Such securities also may be debt instruments,  which
are also known as  collateralized  obligations  and are generally  issued as the
debt of a special purpose entity organized solely for the purpose of owning such
assets and issuing  such debt.  Such  securities  also may  include  instruments
issued  by  certain  trusts,  partnerships  or other  special  purpose  issuers,
including  pass-through  certificates  representing  participations  in, or debt
instruments backed by, the securities and other assets owned by such issuers.

         Non-mortgage-backed securities are not issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
Government  or its  agencies  or  instrumentalities;  however,  the  payment  of
principal  and  interest on such  obligations  may be  guaranteed  up to certain
amounts  and for a  certain  time  period  by a letter  of  credit  issued  by a
financial  institution (such as a bank or insurance  company)  unaffiliated with
the issuers of such securities.

         The purchase of  non-mortgage-backed  securities raises  considerations
peculiar to the financing of the  instruments  underlying such  securities.  For
example, most organizations that issue asset-backed securities relating to motor
vehicle  installment  purchase  obligations  perfect  their  interests  in their
respective  obligations  only by filing a financing  statement and by having the
servicer of the  obligations,  which is usually  the  originator,  take  custody
thereof.  In  such  circumstances,  if  the  servicer  were  to  sell  the  same
obligations to another party,  in violation of its duty not to do so, there is a
risk that such party could  acquire an interest in the  obligations  superior to
that of the holders of the  asset-backed  securities.  Also,  although most such
obligations  grant a security  interest in the motor vehicle being financed,  in
most  states  the  security  interest  in a motor  vehicle  must be noted on the
certificate of title to perfect such security  interest against competing claims
of other parties.  Due to the larger number of vehicles involved,  however,  the
certificate  of title to each  vehicle  financed,  pursuant  to the  obligations
underlying the  asset-backed  securities,  usually is not amended to reflect the
assignment of the seller's  security  interest for the benefit of the holders of
the asset-backed securities. Therefore, there is the possibility that recoveries
on  repossessed  collateral  may not, in some  cases,  be  available  to support
payments on those securities.  In addition,  various state and Federal laws give
the motor  vehicle  owner the right to assert  against the holder of the owner's
obligation  certain  defenses  such owner  would have  against the seller of the
motor  vehicle.  The  assertion of such  defenses  could reduce  payments on the
related  asset-backed  securities.   Insofar  as  credit  card  receivables  are
concerned,  credit card  holders are entitled to the  protection  of a number of
state and Federal  consumer  credit  laws,  many of which give such  holders the
right to set off  certain  amounts  against  balances  owed on the credit  card,
thereby reducing the amounts paid on such receivables.

         The development of non-mortgage  backed securities is at an early stage
compared  to  mortgage-backed  securities.  While the  market  for  asset-backed
securities  is  becoming  increasingly  liquid,  the market for  mortgage-backed
securities  issued by  certain  private  organizations  and  non-mortgage-backed
securities is not as well developed. As stated above, the Adviser, as adviser to
each Fund, intends to limit its purchases of  mortgage-backed  securities issued
by  certain  private   organizations  and   non-mortgage-backed   securities  to
securities that are readily marketable at the time of purchase.
                                       9


<PAGE>

Commercial Instruments

         Commercial  Instruments  consist of short-term U.S.  dollar-denominated
obligations  issued by  domestic  corporations  or by foreign  corporations  and
foreign commercial banks.

         Investments by a Fund in commercial  paper will consist of issues rated
in a manner consistent with such Fund's investment  policies and objectives.  In
addition,  the Funds may acquire  unrated  commercial  paper and corporate bonds
that are  determined  by the Adviser at the time of purchase to be of comparable
quality to rated  instruments  that may be acquired by these Funds as previously
described.

         Variable-rate master demand notes are unsecured instruments that permit
the indebtedness  thereunder to vary and provide for periodic adjustments in the
interest  rate.  While  some of  these  notes  are not  rated by  credit  rating
agencies,  issuers of variable-rate master demand notes must satisfy the Adviser
that  criteria  similar to the  following  are met; (a) if rated by at least two
Nationally   Recognized   Statistical  Rating  Organizations   ("NRSROs"),   the
instruments are rated in the highest rating category for short-term  obligations
given by such  organizations,  or if only  rated by one such  organization,  are
rated in the highest rating  category for short-term debt  obligations  given by
such  organization;  or (b) if not  rated are (i)  comparable  in  priority  and
security to a class of short-term  instruments  of the same issuer that has such
rating(s),  or (ii) of comparable  quality to such  instruments as determined by
the Board of Trustees on the advice of the  Adviser.  Variable-rate  instruments
acquired  by a Fund  will  be  rated  at a level  consistent  with  such  Fund's
investment  objective  and  policies of high  quality as  determined  by a major
rating agency or, if not rated,  will be of comparable  quality as determined by
the Adviser.

         Variable- and floating- rate instruments are unsecured instruments that
permit  the  indebtedness  thereunder  to vary.  While  there  may be no  active
secondary  market  with  respect  to a  particular  variable-  or  floating-rate
instrument  purchased by a Fund,  a Fund may,  from time to time as specified in
the instrument,  demand payment of the principal or may resell the instrument to
a third party. The absence of an active secondary market, however, could make it
difficult for a Fund to dispose of an instrument if the issuer  defaulted on its
payment obligation or during periods when a Fund is not entitled to exercise its
demand rights,  and a Fund could,  for these or other reasons,  suffer a loss. A
Fund may  invest in  variable-  and  floating-  rate  instruments  only when the
Adviser deems the investment to involve minimal credit risk. If such instruments
are not rated,  the Adviser will  consider the earning  power,  cash flows,  and
other liquidity ratios of the issuers of such instruments and will  continuously
monitor their financial status to meet payment on demand. In determining average
weighted  portfolio  maturity,  an instrument  will be deemed to have a maturity
equal to the longer of the period remaining to the next interest rate adjustment
or the demand notice period specified in the instrument.

Repurchase Agreements

         The repurchase price under the repurchase  agreements  described in the
Prospectuses  generally equals the price paid by a Fund plus interest negotiated
on the basis of  current  short-term  rates  (which may be more or less than the
rate on the securities underlying the repurchase agreement).  Securities subject
to  repurchase  agreements  will  be  held  by  the  Trust's  custodian,   or


                                       10
  
<PAGE>

a  sub-custodian,  in a  segregated  account or in the Federal  Reserve/Treasury
book-entry system. Repurchase agreements are considered to be loans by the Trust
under the 1940 Act.

Reverse Repurchase Agreements

         At the time a Fund enters into a reverse repurchase  agreement,  it may
establish a segregated account with its custodian bank in which it will maintain
cash,  U.S.  Government  securities or other liquid high grade debt  obligations
equal in value to its obligations in respect of reverse  repurchase  agreements.
Reverse  repurchase  agreements  involve  the risk that the market  value of the
securities the Funds are obligated to repurchase under the agreement may decline
below the repurchase price. In the event the buyer of securities under a reverse
repurchase  agreement files for bankruptcy or becomes insolvent,  the Funds' use
of proceeds of the agreement may be restricted  pending a  determination  by the
other  party,  or its  trustee  or  receiver,  whether  to  enforce  the  Funds'
obligation to repurchase  the  securities.  Reverse  repurchase  agreements  are
speculative  techniques  involving  leverage,  and are subject to asset coverage
requirements if the Funds do not establish and maintain a segregated account (as
described  above).  In addition,  some or all of the proceeds received by a Fund
from the sale of a  portfolio  instrument  may be applied to the  purchase  of a
repurchase agreement.  To the extent the proceeds are used in this fashion and a
common  broker/dealer  is  the  counterparty  on  both  the  reverse  repurchase
agreement and the repurchase agreement, the arrangement might be recharacterized
as a swap  transaction.  Under the  requirements  of the 1940 Act, the Funds are
required  to  maintain  an  asset  coverage   (including  the  proceeds  of  the
borrowings) of at least 300% of all borrowings.  Depending on market conditions,
the Funds' asset coverage and other factors at the time of a reverse repurchase,
the Funds may not establish a segregated account when the Adviser believes it is
not in the best  interests  of the Funds to do so. In this  case,  such  reverse
repurchase  agreements  will  be  considered  borrowings  subject  to the  asset
coverage described above.

Lending Securities

         To increase  return on portfolio  securities,  certain of the Funds may
lend  their  portfolio  securities  to  broker/dealers  and other  institutional
investors  pursuant  to  agreements  requiring  that the  loans be  continuously
secured by  collateral  equal at all times in value to at least the market value
of the securities loaned. Collateral for such loans may include cash, securities
of the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities, an irrevocable letter
of credit issued by (i) a U.S.  bank that has total assets  exceeding $1 billion
and that is a member of the Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation,  or (ii) a
foreign bank that is one of the 75 largest foreign  commercial banks in terms of
total assets, or any combination  thereof.  Such loans will not be made if, as a
result,  the aggregate of all outstanding loans of the Fund involved exceeds 30%
of the  value of its  total  assets.  There  may be risks of delay in  receiving
additional  collateral or in recovering the securities  loaned or even a loss of
rights in the collateral should the borrower of the securities fail financially.
However,  loans are made only to  borrowers  deemed by the Adviser to be of good
standing  and when,  in its  judgment,  the  income  to be earned  from the loan
justifies the attendant risks.  Pursuant to the securities loan agreement a Fund
is able to  terminate  the  securities  loan  upon  notice of not more than five
business days and thereby secure the return to the Fund of securities  identical
to the transferred securities upon termination of the loan.


                                       11
<PAGE>


American Depositary Receipts

         The Non-Money Market Funds  (consistent with their investment  policies
and objectives) may invest in American Depositary  Receipts ("ADRs"),  which are
receipts  issued by an American  bank or trust company  evidencing  ownership of
underlying  securities  issued  by a  foreign  issuer.  ADRs may be  listed on a
national  securities exchange or may trade in the  over-the-counter  market. The
prices of ADRs are denominated in U.S. dollars;  the underlying  security may be
denominated in a foreign  currency.  The  underlying  security may be subject to
foreign  government  taxes  which  would  reduce  the yield on such  securities.
Investments in such securities also involve  certain  inherent risks,  including
those set forth in the  Prospectuses  for the Funds under "Appendix A -- Foreign
Securities."

Futures, Options and Other Derivative Instruments

         Certain of the Funds may purchase put and call options which are traded
on a  national  securities  exchange  in an amount not  exceeding  5% of its net
assets. Such options may relate to particular  securities or to various stock or
bond indices.  Purchasing  options is a specialized  investment  technique which
entails a substantial  risk of a complete loss of the amount paid as premiums to
the writer of the option.

         Futures  Contracts and Related  Options.  In addition,  the Adviser may
determine that it would be in the interest of a Fund to purchase or sell futures
contracts,  or options thereon, as a hedge against changes resulting from market
conditions  in the  value  of the  securities  held by one of the  Funds,  or of
securities which one of them intends to purchase.  For example, a Fund may enter
into transactions  involving a stock or bond index futures contract,  which is a
bilateral agreement pursuant to which two parties agree to take or make delivery
of an amount of cash equal to a specified  dollar  amount  times the  difference
between the index value (which assigns  relative  values to the common stocks or
bonds  included  in the  index)  at the  close  of the last  trading  day of the
contract and the price at which the futures  contract is originally  struck.  No
physical delivery of the underlying stocks or bonds in the index is made. During
the coming fiscal year, each of these Funds intends to limit its transactions in
futures  contracts and options  thereon so that: (i) no more than 5% of a Fund's
total assets would be committed to initial  margin  deposits or premiums on such
contracts and (ii) immediately after entering into such contracts,  no more than
30% of a Fund's total assets would be represented by such contracts.

         Options  Trading.  Call  options  written by a Fund give the holder the
right to buy the underlying  securities  from the Fund at a fixed exercise price
up to a stated expiration date or, in the case of certain options, on such date.
Put options give the holder the right to sell the  underlying  securities to the
Fund  during  the term of the  option at a fixed  exercise  price up to a stated
expiration date or, in the case of certain  options,  on such date. Call options
are "covered" by a Fund, for example, when it owns the underlying securities and
put options are "covered" by the Fund,  for example,  when it has  established a
segregated  account  of  cash,  cash  equivalents  or  securities  which  can be
liquidated  promptly  to  satisfy  any  obligation  of a Fund  to  purchase  the
underlying  securities.  A Fund also may write combinations of puts and calls on
the same underlying security.


                                       12
<PAGE>

         A Fund will receive a premium from writing a put or call option,  which
increases the gross income of a Fund in the event the option expires unexercised
or is closed out at a profit.  The amount of the  premium  will  reflect,  among
other things,  the  relationship  of the exercise  price to the market price and
volatility of the underlying security,  the remaining term of the option, supply
and demand and  interest  rates.  By writing a call  option,  a Fund  limits its
opportunity  to profit from any increase in the market  value of the  underlying
security above the exercise price of the option. By writing a put option, a Fund
assumes the risk that it may be required to purchase the underlying security for
an exercise  price higher than its then  current  market  value,  resulting in a
potential capital loss unless the security subsequently appreciates in value.

         A Fund  may  terminate  an  option  that it has  written  prior  to its
expiration by entering  into a closing  purchase  transaction  in which the Fund
purchases an option having the same terms as the option written. It is possible,
however, that illiquidity in the options markets may make it difficult from time
to time for a Fund to close out its written option positions.

         A Fund also may purchase put or call options in anticipation of changes
in interest  rates which may adversely  affect the value of its portfolio or the
prices of  securities  that the Fund  wants to  purchase  at a later  date.  The
premium paid for a put or call option plus any transaction costs will reduce the
benefit,  if any, realized by a Fund upon exercise of the option and, unless the
price of the underlying  security  changes  sufficiently,  the option may expire
without value.

         A Fund may write and purchase  options on  securities  both for hedging
purposes and in an effort to increase current income. Options on securities that
are written or purchased by a Fund will be traded on U.S. and foreign  exchanges
and over-the-counter.

         The  staff  of  the  SEC  has  taken  the   position   that   purchased
over-the-counter  options  and  assets  used to cover  written  over-the-counter
options are illiquid and,  therefore,  together with other illiquid  securities,
cannot exceed  applicable  limitations on the amount of a Fund's assets that may
be  invested  in  illiquid  securities.  The  Adviser  intends to limit a Fund's
writing of over-the-counter  options in accordance with the following procedure.
Each Fund  intends to write  over-the-counter  options  only with  primary  U.S.
Government  securities  dealers  recognized  by the Federal  Reserve Bank of New
York.  Also, the contracts  which a Fund has in place with such primary  dealers
will  provide that the Fund has the absolute  right to  repurchase  an option it
writes  at any time at a price  which  represents  the  fair  market  value,  as
determined in good faith through negotiation  between the parties,  but which in
no event will exceed a price  determined  pursuant to a formula in the contract.
Although the specific formula may vary between  contracts with different primary
dealers,  the  formula  will  generally  be based on a multiple  of the  premium
received  by a Fund for writing  the  option,  plus the  amount,  if any, of the
option's intrinsic value (i.e., the amount that the option is in-the-money). The
formula  also may  include a factor to account  for the  difference  between the
price of the  security  and the  strike  price of the  option  if the  option is
written  out-of-the-money.  A Fund will treat all or a part of the formula price
as  illiquid  for  purposes  of  the  applicable  SEC  test  regarding  illiquid
securities.

         As stated in the related  Prospectuses,  each Fund may purchase put and
call  options  listed  on a  national  securities  exchange.  This  is a  highly
specialized  activity  which  entails  greater than ordinary  investment  risks.
Regardless of how much the market price of the underlying  security

                                       13
 

<PAGE>

increases or decreases,  the option buyer's risk is limited to the amount of the
original investment for the purchase of the option. However, options may be more
volatile than the underlying securities,  and therefore,  on a percentage basis,
an  investment  in  options  may be  subject  to  greater  fluctuation  than  an
investment  in the  underlying  securities.  A  listed  call  option  gives  the
purchaser  of the  option the right to buy from a  clearing  corporation,  and a
writer has the  obligation to sell to the clearing  corporation,  the underlying
security at the stated exercise price at any time prior to the expiration of the
option,  regardless of the market price of the security. The premium paid to the
writer is in  consideration  for undertaking  the  obligations  under the option
contract.  A listed  put  option  gives  the  purchaser  the  right to sell to a
clearing corporation the underlying security at the stated exercise price at any
time prior to the expiration date of the option,  regardless of the market price
of the security.  Put and call options purchased by a Fund will be valued at the
last sale price or, in the absence of such a price,  at the mean between bid and
asked prices.

         A Fund's obligation to sell a security subject to a covered call option
written by it, or to purchase a security subject to a secured put option written
by it, may be terminated  prior to the expiration date of the option by the Fund
executing a closing purchase transaction,  which is effected by purchasing on an
exchange an option of the same series (i.e., same underlying security,  exercise
price, and expiration date) as the option  previously  written.  Such a purchase
does not result in the ownership of an option.  A closing  purchase  transaction
will  ordinarily be effected to realize a profit on an  outstanding  option,  to
prevent an  underlying  security  from being  called,  to permit the sale of the
underlying  security,  or to  permit  the  writing  of a new  option  containing
different  terms on such  underlying  security.  The cost of such a  liquidation
purchase plus  transaction  costs may be greater than the premium  received upon
the original  option,  in which event the Fund will have  incurred a loss in the
transaction.  An option  position  may be closed out only on an  exchange  which
provides  a  secondary  market  for an  option of the same  series.  There is no
assurance  that a liquid  secondary  market on an  exchange  will  exist for any
particular  option.  A covered  call option  writer,  unable to effect a closing
purchase transaction, will not be able to sell the underlying security until the
option  expires or the  underlying  security is delivered upon exercise with the
result  that the  writer in such  circumstances  will be  subject to the risk of
market decline in the underlying  security during such period. A Fund will write
an option on a particular  security  only if the Adviser  believes that a liquid
secondary  market will exist on an exchange for options of the same series which
will permit the Fund to make a closing  purchase  transaction  in order to close
out its position.

         When a Fund writes a covered  call  option,  an amount equal to the net
premium (the premium  less the  commission)  received by the Fund is included in
the liability  section of the Fund's  statement of assets and  liabilities  as a
deferred  credit.  The  amount  of the  deferred  credit  will  be  subsequently
marked-to-market to reflect the current value of the option written. The current
value of the traded  option is the last sale price or, in the absence of a sale,
the  average of the closing bid and asked  prices.  If an option  expires on the
stipulated  expiration  date  or if the  Fund  enters  into a  closing  purchase
transaction,  it will realize a gain (or loss if the cost of a closing  purchase
transaction  exceeds the net premium  received when the option is sold), and the
deferred credit related to such option will be eliminated. Any gain on a covered
call  option may be offset by a decline in the  market  price of the  underlying
security  during the option period.  If a covered call option is exercised,  the
Fund may deliver the  underlying  security held by it or purchase the underlying
security in the open market.  In either event,  the proceeds of the sale will

                                       14
 
<PAGE>

be increased by the net premium originally received, and the Fund will realize a
gain or loss. If a secured put option is exercised,  the amount paid by the Fund
involved for the underlying  security will be partially  offset by the amount of
the premium  previously paid to the Fund.  Premiums from expired options written
by a Fund and net gains  from  closing  purchase  transactions  are  treated  as
short-term capital gains for Federal income tax purposes,  and losses on closing
purchase transactions are short-term capital losses.

         Futures  Contracts.   A  futures  contract  is  a  bilateral  agreement
providing  for the  purchase  and  sale of a  specified  type  and  amount  of a
financial  instrument,  or,  in the case of  futures  contracts  on  indices  of
securities, for the making and acceptance of a cash settlement, at a stated time
in the future for a fixed price. By its terms, a futures contract provides for a
specified settlement date on which, in the case of the majority of interest rate
futures  contracts,  the fixed  income  securities  underlying  a  contract  are
delivered by the seller and paid for by the purchaser,  or on which, in the case
of a stock index futures contract, an amount equal to a dollar amount multiplied
by the  difference  between  the value of a stock index at the close of the last
trading day of the  contract and the value of such index at the time the futures
contract was originally entered into is settled between the purchaser and seller
in cash. The purchase or sale of a futures contract differs from the purchase or
sale of a security in that no purchase price is paid or received at the time the
contract is entered into.  Instead,  an amount of cash or cash equivalents,  the
value of which may vary but is generally equal to 2% or less of the value of the
contract,  must be  deposited  with the broker as initial  deposit or  "margin."
Subsequent  payments to and from the broker,  referred to as "variation margin,"
are made on a daily  basis as the  value of the  index  underlying  the  futures
contract  fluctuates,  making  positions  in the futures  contract  more or less
valuable, a process known as "marking to the market."

         At any time prior to the expiration of a futures contract, a trader may
elect to close out a Fund's position by taking an opposite position,  subject to
the  availability  of a secondary  market,  which will operate to terminate  the
initial  position.  At that time, a final  determination  of variation margin is
made and any loss  experienced by a party is required to be paid to the exchange
clearing corporation, while any profit due to a party must be delivered to it.

         Futures  contracts  differ  from  options  in that  they are  bilateral
agreements, with both the purchaser and the seller equally obligated to complete
the  transaction.  Futures  contracts call for settlement only on the expiration
date, and cannot be "exercised" at any other time during their term.

         Options on Futures Contracts. An option on a futures contract gives the
purchaser  (the  "holder") the right,  but not the  obligation,  to enter into a
"long"  position in the underlying  futures  contract  (i.e., a purchase of such
futures  contract) in the case of an option to purchase (a "call" option),  or a
"short"  position  in the  underlying  futures  contract  (i.e.,  a sale of such
futures contract) in the case of an option to sell (a "put" option),  at a fixed
price (the "strike  price") up to a stated  expiration  date.  The holder pays a
non-refundable  purchase  price  for the  option,  known as the  "premium."  The
maximum  amount  of risk the  purchase  of the  option  assumes  is equal to the
premium plus related transaction costs, although this entire amount may be lost.
Upon  exercise of the option by the holder,  the exchange  clearing  corporation
establishes a  corresponding  long position in the case of a put option.  In the
event that an option is exercised,

                                       15
  
<PAGE>

the  parties  will be subject to all the risks  associated  with the  trading of
futures  contracts,  such as payment of variation margin deposits.  In addition,
the writer of an option on a futures contract,  unlike the holder, is subject to
initial and variation margin requirements on the option position.

         An option,  whether  based on a futures  contract,  a stock index or an
equity security,  becomes worthless to the holder when it expires. A position in
an option may be  terminated  by the  purchaser or seller prior to expiration by
effecting a closing purchase or sale transaction  subject to the availability of
a  secondary  market,  which is the  purchase  or sale of an  option of the same
series  (i.e.,  the same  exercise  price  and  expiration  date) as the  option
previously  purchased or sold.  The  difference  between the  premiums  paid and
received represents the party's profit or loss on the transaction.

         The  use  of  futures   contracts  and  options  does  involve  certain
transaction  costs and risks.  A Fund's  ability  effectively  to hedge all or a
portion of its portfolio through transactions in futures,  options on futures or
options on stock indices  depends on the degree to which  movements in the value
of the securities or index  underlying  such hedging  instrument  correlate with
movements  in the value of the  relevant  portion  of the Fund's  holdings.  The
trading  of futures  and  options on indices  involves  the  additional  risk of
imperfect  correlation  between movements in the futures or option price and the
value of the  underlying  index.  While a Fund will establish a future or option
position only if there appears to be a liquid secondary  market therefor,  there
can be no assurance that such a market will exist for any particular  futures or
option  contract at any specific time. In such event,  it may not be possible to
close out a position  held by a Fund,  which could require such Fund to purchase
or  sell  the  instrument  underlying  the  position,  make  or  receive  a cash
settlement,  or meet  ongoing  variation  margin  requirements.  Investments  in
futures  contracts on fixed income  securities and related  indices  involve the
risk that if the Adviser's  investment judgment concerning the general direction
of interest rates is incorrect,  a Fund's overall performance may be poorer than
if it had not entered into any such contract. Income earned from transactions in
futures  contracts and options thereon would be treated in part as a short-term,
and in part as a  long-term,  capital  gain and,  if not offset by net  realized
capital losses, generally would be subject to Federal income taxes.

When-Issued Purchases and Forward Commitments

         A Fund may agree to purchase securities on a when-issued basis or enter
into a forward commitment to purchase  securities.  When a Fund engages in these
transactions,  its custodian will segregate cash, U.S. government  securities or
other high  quality  debt  obligations  equal to the  amount of the  commitment.
Normally,  the  custodian  will  segregate  portfolio  securities  to  satisfy a
purchase commitment,  and in such a case a Fund may be required  subsequently to
segregate  additional assets in order to ensure that the value of the segregated
assets remains equal to the amount of the Fund's commitment. Because a Fund will
segregate  cash or liquid  assets to satisfy  its  purchase  commitments  in the
manner described, the Fund's liquidity and ability to manage its portfolio might
be  adversely  affected in the event its  commitments  to  purchase  when-issued
securities  ever  exceeded  25% of the  value  of its  assets.  In the case of a
forward commitment to sell portfolio securities,  the Fund's custodian will hold
the portfolio securities themselves in a segregated account while the commitment
is outstanding.


                                       16
<PAGE>

         A Fund will make  commitments  to purchase  securities on a when-issued
basis or to purchase or sell securities on a forward  commitment basis only with
the intention of completing the transaction  and actually  purchasing or selling
the securities. If deemed advisable as a matter of investment strategy, however,
a Fund may dispose of or renegotiate a commitment  after it is entered into, and
may sell  securities it has committed to purchase  before those  securities  are
delivered  to the  Fund on the  settlement  date.  In these  cases  the Fund may
realize a capital gain or loss.

         When a Fund engages in when-issued and forward commitment transactions,
it relies on the other party to consummate  the trade.  Failure of such party to
do so may result in the Fund's  incurring  a loss or missing an  opportunity  to
obtain a price considered to be advantageous.

         The value of the  securities  underlying  a  when-issued  purchase or a
forward commitment to purchase  securities,  and any subsequent  fluctuations in
their value,  is taken into account  when  determining  the net asset value of a
Fund starting on the date the Fund agrees to purchase the  securities.  The Fund
does not earn  dividends on the  securities it has  committed to purchase  until
they are paid for and delivered on the  settlement  date.  When the Fund makes a
forward  commitment to sell securities it owns, the proceeds to be received upon
settlement are included in the Fund's assets.  Fluctuations  in the value of the
underlying securities are not reflected in the Fund's net asset value as long as
the commitment remains in effect.

Municipal Securities

         Generally.  The two principal  classifications of municipal  securities
are "general obligation" securities and "revenue" securities. General obligation
securities  are secured by the issuer's  pledge of its full faith,  credit,  and
taxing power for the payment of principal and interest.  Revenue  securities are
payable  only from the revenues  derived from a particular  facility or class of
facilities or, in some cases, from the proceeds of a special excise tax or other
specific revenue source such as the user of the facility being financed. Private
activity  bonds held by a Fund are in most cases revenue  securities and are not
payable from the unrestricted revenues of the issuer.  Consequently,  the credit
quality of private  activity  bonds is  usually  directly  related to the credit
standing of the corporate user of the facility involved.

         Municipal  securities may include "moral  obligation"  bonds, which are
normally  issued by special purpose public  authorities.  If the issuer of moral
obligation  bonds is unable to meet its debt  service  obligations  from current
revenues,  it may draw on a reserve fund,  the  restoration  of which is a moral
commitment but not a legal obligation of the state or municipality which created
the issuer.

         Municipal   securities   may  include   variable-  or  floating-   rate
instruments issued by industrial development  authorities and other governmental
entities.  While there may not be an active  secondary  market with respect to a
particular  instrument  purchased  by a Fund,  a Fund may demand  payment of the
principal  and accrued  interest on the  instrument  or may resell it to a third
party as  specified  in the  instruments.  The  absence  of an active  secondary
market, however, could make it difficult for a Fund to dispose of the instrument
if the issuer defaulted on its payment

                                       17
  

<PAGE>

obligation  or during  periods the Fund is not  entitled to exercise  its demand
rights, and the Fund could, for these or other reasons, suffer a loss.

         Some of these  instruments  may be  unrated,  but  unrated  instruments
purchased  by a Fund  will be  determined  by the  Adviser  to be of  comparable
quality at the time of purchase to instruments rated "high quality" by any major
rating  service.  Where  necessary to ensure that an instrument is of comparable
"high  quality,"  a Fund will  require  that an issuer's  obligation  to pay the
principal of the note may be backed by an  unconditional  bank letter or line of
credit, guarantee, or commitment to lend.

         Municipal  securities may include  participations in privately arranged
loans to  municipal  borrowers,  some of which may be referred to as  "municipal
leases." Generally such loans are unrated, in which case they will be determined
by the  Adviser to be of  comparable  quality at the time of  purchase  to rated
instruments that may be acquired by a Fund. Frequently, privately arranged loans
have variable  interest  rates and may be backed by a bank letter of credit.  In
other  cases,  they may be  unsecured  or may be  secured  by assets  not easily
liquidated.  Moreover,  such  loans in most  cases are not  backed by the taxing
authority of the issuers and may have limited marketability or may be marketable
only by  virtue  of a  provision  requiring  repayment  following  demand by the
lender.  Such loans made by a Fund may have a demand  provision  permitting  the
Fund to  require  payment  within  seven  days.  Participations  in such  loans,
however,  may  not  have  such a  demand  provision  and  may  not be  otherwise
marketable.

         Although lease obligations do not constitute general obligations of the
municipality  for which the  municipality's  taxing  power is  pledged,  a lease
obligation is ordinarily  backed by the  municipality's  covenant to budget for,
appropriate,  and make the  payments  due under the lease  obligation.  However,
certain lease obligations contain "non-appropriation" clauses which provide that
the  municipality  has no  obligation  to make  lease  or  installment  purchase
payments in future  years  unless  money is  appropriated  for such purpose on a
yearly basis.  In addition to the  "non-appropriation"  risk,  these  securities
represent a relatively  new type of  financing  that has not yet  developed  the
depth of marketability associated with more conventional bonds. In the case of a
"non-appropriation"  lease, the Funds' ability to recover under the lease in the
event of non-appropriation or default will be limited solely to the repossession
of the leased property in the event foreclosure might prove difficult.

         The Funds will not invest more than 5% of their total investment assets
in lease  obligations  that contain  "non-appropriation"  clauses  where (1) the
nature of the leased  equipment or property is such that its ownership or use is
essential to a governmental function of the municipality, (2) the lease payments
will commence amortization of principal at an early date resulting in an average
life of seven years or less for the lease obligation,  (3) appropriate covenants
will be obtained from the municipal  obligor  prohibiting  the  substitution  or
purchase of similar  equipment if lease payments are not  appropriated,  (4) the
lease obligor has  maintained  good market  acceptability  in the past,  (5) the
investment is of a size that will be attractive to institutional  investors, and
(6) the underlying leased equipment has elements of probability  and/or use that
enhance its marketability in the event  foreclosure on the underlying  equipment
were ever required.  The Funds have not imposed any percentage  limitations with
respect  to  their   investment  in  lease   obligations   not  subject  to  the
"non-appropriation" risk. To the extent municipal leases are illiquid, they will
be

                                       18
 

<PAGE>

subject  to each  Fund's  limitation  on  investments  in  illiquid  securities.
Recovery  of an  investment  in any such loan that is  illiquid  and  payable on
demand may depend on the ability of the municipal borrower to meet an obligation
for full  repayment  of  principal  and payment of accrued  interest  within the
demand  period,  normally  seven days or less (unless a Fund  determines  that a
particular loan issue,  unlike most such loans, has a readily available market).
As it deems  appropriate,  the Adviser will establish  procedures to monitor the
credit standing of each such municipal  borrower,  including its ability to meet
contractual payment obligations.

         In evaluating  the credit quality of a municipal  lease  obligation and
determining  whether such lease  obligation  will be  considered  "liquid,"  the
Adviser for each Fund will consider: (1) whether the lease can be cancelled; (2)
what  assurance  there is that the assets  represented by the lease can be sold;
(3) the strength of the lessee's general credit (e.g., its debt, administrative,
economic,   and  financial   characteristics);   (4)  the  likelihood  that  the
municipality  will  discontinue  appropriating  funding for the leased  property
because the  property is no longer  deemed  essential to the  operations  of the
municipality (e.g., the potential for an "event of non-appropriation");  and (5)
the legal recourse in the event of failure to appropriate.

         Municipal  securities  may  include  units of  participation  in trusts
holding pools of tax-exempt  leases.  Municipal  participation  interests may be
purchased  from  financial  institutions,  and give the  purchaser  an undivided
interest  in one or more  underlying  municipal  security.  To the  extent  that
municipal  participation  interests are considered to be "illiquid  securities,"
such  instruments  are  subject to each  Fund's  limitation  on the  purchase of
illiquid securities. Municipal leases and participating interests therein, which
may take the form of a lease or an  installment  sales  contract,  are issued by
state and local  governments  and  authorities  to  acquire  a wide  variety  of
equipment and facilities. Interest payments on qualifying leases are exempt from
Federal income taxes.

         In addition,  certain of the Funds may acquire  "stand-by  commitments"
from banks or broker/dealers with respect to municipal  securities held in their
portfolios.  Under a stand-by commitment,  a dealer would agree to purchase at a
Fund's option  specified  Municipal  Securities at a specified  price. The Funds
will acquire stand-by  commitments solely to facilitate  portfolio liquidity and
do not intend to exercise their rights thereunder for trading purposes.

         Although the Funds do not presently intend to do so on a regular basis,
each may invest more than 25% of its total  assets in municipal  securities  the
interest  on which is paid  solely  from  revenues  of similar  projects if such
investment is deemed necessary or appropriate by the Adviser. To the extent that
more than 25% of a Fund's total assets are invested in Municipal Securities that
are payable from the revenues of similar projects, a Fund will be subject to the
peculiar  risks  presented by such projects to a greater extent than it would be
if its assets were not so concentrated.

         There  are,  of  course,   variations   in  the  quality  of  Municipal
Securities, both within a particular classification and between classifications,
and the  yields  on  Municipal  Securities  depend  upon a variety  of  factors,
including  general  money  market  conditions,  the  financial  condition of the
issuer,  general  conditions  of  the  municipal  bond  market,  the  size  of a
particular  offering,  the  maturity  of the  obligation,  and the rating of the
issue. The ratings of nationally  recognized

                                       19
  

<PAGE>

statistical rating  organizations  represent their opinions as to the quality of
Municipal Securities.  It should be emphasized,  however, that these ratings are
general and are not absolute standards of quality, and Municipal Securities with
the same maturity,  interest  rate,  and rating may have different  yields while
Municipal  Securities  of the same  maturity  and interest  rate with  different
ratings may have the same yield.  Subsequent to its purchase by a Fund, an issue
of  Municipal  Securities  may cease to be rated,  or its  rating may be reduced
below the minimum  rating  required for purchase by that Fund.  The Adviser will
consider such an event in determining whether a Fund should continue to hold the
obligation.

         Opinions  relating to the validity of Municipal  Securities  and to the
exemption of interest  thereon from regular  Federal  income tax or state income
tax are  rendered  by  counsel  to the  issuer  or bond  counsel  at the time of
issuance. Neither the Funds nor the Adviser will review the proceedings relating
to the issuance of Municipal  Securities  or the bases for opinions  relating to
the validity of such issuance.

         The payment of principal and interest on most securities purchased by a
Fund will depend upon the ability of the issuers to meet their obligations. Each
state,  each  of  their  political  subdivisions,   municipalities,  and  public
authorities,  as well as the District of Columbia,  Puerto Rico,  Guam,  and the
Virgin Islands are a separate  "issuer" as that term is used in the Prospectuses
and this SAI.  The  non-governmental  user of  facilities  financed  by  private
activity  bonds is also  considered  to be an "issuer." An issuer's  obligations
under its Municipal  Securities  are subject to the  provisions  of  bankruptcy,
insolvency,  and other laws affecting the rights and remedies of creditors, such
as the  Federal  Bankruptcy  Code,  and laws,  if any,  which may be  enacted by
Federal or state  legislatures  extending  the time for payment of  principal or
interest,  or both,  or imposing  other  constraints  upon  enforcement  of such
obligations or upon the ability of  municipalities  to levy taxes.  The power or
ability of an issuer to meet its  obligations for the payment of interest on and
principal of its Municipal  Securities may be materially  adversely  affected by
litigation or other conditions.

         Although the Municipal  Income Fund and the State  Municipal Bond Funds
invest  primarily  in  Municipal  Securities  with  long-term  maturities,   the
Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund and the State Intermediate Municipal Bond Funds
invest primarily in Municipal Securities with intermediate-term maturities, they
may also purchase  short-term General Obligation Notes, Tax Anticipation  Notes,
Bond Anticipation  Notes,  Revenue  Anticipation  Notes,  Tax-Exempt  Commercial
Paper,  Construction  Loan Notes,  and other  forms of  short-term  loans.  Such
instruments are issued with a short-term maturity in anticipation of the receipt
of tax funds,  the proceeds of bond  placements,  or other  revenues.  The State
Intermediate  Municipal  Bond  Funds  may also  invest in  long-term  tax-exempt
instruments.

         Certain types of Municipal  Securities  (private  activity  bonds) have
been or are issued to obtain  funds to provide,  among other  things,  privately
operated housing facilities,  pollution control facilities,  convention or trade
show facilities,  mass transit, airport, port or parking facilities, and certain
local facilities for water supply,  gas,  electricity,  or sewage or solid waste
disposal.  Private activity bonds are also issued for privately held or publicly
owned corporations in the financing of commercial or industrial facilities. Most
governments are authorized to issue private  activity bonds for such purposes in
order  to  encourage  corporations  to  locate  within  their

                                       20
<PAGE>

communities. The principal and interest on these obligations may be payable from
the general revenues of the users of such facilities.

         From time to time,  proposals have been introduced  before Congress for
the purpose of restricting  or eliminating  the Federal income tax exemption for
interest on Municipal Securities. Moreover, with respect to Municipal Securities
issued by Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Texas, or Virginia issuers, the Trust cannot predict which legislation,  if any,
may be proposed in the state  legislatures or which proposals,  if any, might be
enacted.  Such  proposals,  while pending or if enacted,  might  materially  and
adversely affect the availability of Municipal Securities generally, or Florida,
Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, or Virginia
Municipal Securities specifically,  for investment by one of these Funds and the
liquidity and value of such portfolios.  In such an event, a Fund impacted would
re-evaluate its investment  objective and policies and consider possible changes
in its structure or possible dissolution.

         The following information relating to the State Intermediate  Municipal
Bond Funds and the State Municipal Bond Funds supplements  information  relevant
to each of those Funds in the related Prospectuses.

         Florida.  Florida  is now  the  fourth  most  populous  state  with  an
estimated 1995 population of 14,141,047. By the year 2000 population will likely
exceed 15 million.  Population growth has historically been driven by retirement
migration with local economies weighted heavily in tourism and agriculture. Over
the  past  twenty  years,   retirement,   agriculture   and  tourism  have  been
complemented  by high  technology  jobs,  service sector jobs and  international
trade. In the meantime,  the three traditional industries have taken on a global
character.  Trade and  tourism  have  become  international  and this has fueled
foreign retirement migration.  The character and dynamism of Florida has changed
considerably  in  recent  decades  and the  state  is  considered  a  bellwether
indicator for the health of national economic trends.

         The health of the national economy plays an important role in Florida's
fiscal soundness and economic development.  During the period of strong national
expansion in the mid to late 1980's,  Florida's population growth reached a peak
of 400,000 per year.  Today,  as this country  enters its fifth year of economic
expansion, population growth in Florida exceeds 250,000 per year.

         The  emergence  of  Florida as one of the most  populous  states in the
United States has placed  significant  pressure on state and local government to
provide  infrastructure  and  municipal  and urban  services.  During the 1980's
growth was so rapid that a significant  backlog of need emerged which, today, is
still being  filled.  Across the state,  construction  of new  highway  systems,
airport expansions, local school and university systems, hospitals and jails are
being  put in place.  Much of this  growth  is being  funded by bonded  revenues
secured by the  expanding  real  property  tax base.  During the ten year period
ending in 1994,  Florida  real  property  values  increased 70 percent from $376
billion to $641  billion.  Residential  property  values  account for nearly two
thirds of all value accounting for over $400 billion in value. Despite the rapid
population growth and resulting  increases in improved  residential  properties,
commercial and industrial  valuations have also grown consistently.  Today these
values  still  account for 17 percent

                                       21
 

<PAGE>

of  Florida  property  values as they did a decade  ago.  There is now over $100
billion in real  property  value in  commercial  and  industrial  properties  in
Florida.

         One reason  commercial  and  industrial  values have  increased  is the
strategic nature of the industries that have located and grown in the state. The
Florida  industrial base is  concentrated in high technology  industries such as
electronics,  medical  equipment,  laser optics,  computer  simulation and space
travel. As a result,  while defense contract spending has declined nationally by
over 20  percent  from  1985-1994,  Florida's  value of  defense  contracts  has
increased 12 percent to nearly $6 billion over the same period.

         With  increasing  demands for  services  and  comparatively  low taxes,
Florida has  experienced  a rapid growth in the volume of bond debt.  Because of
rapid  population  growth however,  per capita State debt remains well below the
national  average.  In 1992, the outstanding  state debt, among all states,  was
$1,461 per capita compared with $912 in Florida.

         Part of the focus on needs and  services  at the state level comes from
the philosophy behind Florida's growth management  legislation,  passed in 1985.
This  legislation  recognized the need to preserve  Florida's  unique quality of
life in the face of rapid  growth and  development  and  expanding  demands  for
physical  infrastructure and social services.  One of the key components of this
legislation is a rule requiring  infrastructure  be in place concurrent with new
development.  In addition,  the growth  management  legislation gave rise to the
designation of developable urban areas through an update of all locally land use
plans,  a  policy  to  discourage   urban  sprawl  and  a  program  to  purchase
environmentally sensitive lands.

         The Growth Management Act of 1985 and the concurrency rule has affected
Florida's economic growth and development in some regions of the state and could
continue to impact the economy in the future.  In addition,  the location of new
development  will be more carefully  scrutinized  with respect to  environmental
sensitivity and natural resource limitations. Growth management legislation will
affect all areas of the state with  varying  degrees of impact  depending on the
specific local  conditions  such as,  existing  infrastructure  capacity,  local
environmental constraints,  and limitations on natural resources such as potable
water and habitat  preservation.  Having now  experienced  ten years  subject to
growth  management rules, it appears that The Growth Management Act of 1985 has,
on balance,  been  beneficial.  Growth  management has helped improve quality of
life, ease infrastructure  shortfalls and focused the State agenda on preserving
quality of life  through  growth  management  regulation  and other state funded
environmental land preservation programs.

         At  the  regional  level,   local  economies   within  Florida  perform
differently  according to their urban or rural  qualities  and level of economic
diversification.  The spectrum of local economies spans dense urban centers such
as Miami and Tampa to rural agricultural regions of citrus,  cattle ranching and
sugar cane production.

         Southeast Florida includes Miami, Fort Lauderdale,  West Palm Beach and
the Florida Keys. This area is highly urban and economically  diverse.  Tourism,
retirement,   high  technology  computer   manufacturing,   medical  industries,
international  trade,  winter  vegetable crops and sugar cane production are the
prominent  features of this regional  economy.  The area accounts for just


                                       22
 

<PAGE>

under one-third of the state's  population.  Hurricane  Andrew struck south Dade
County in fall,  1992.  Some  80,000  homes  were  destroyed  along  with  local
businesses.  During the four years since the hurricane,  approximately  80 to 90
percent of the homes have been restored.  The restoration and rebuilding process
is now  essentially  complete.  Over the long term, the effects of the hurricane
may speed  the  suburbanization  of South  Florida.  Other  factors  helping  to
diminish  agriculture  locally  include  environmental  preservation  efforts in
sugarcane  lands,  and the effect of foreign  competition  due to NAFTA on local
winter fruit and vegetable growers.

         In Broward and Palm Beach Counties, in particular,  growth management's
concurrency  requirements  have played a significant  role in limiting  economic
expansion  as compared  with other  regions of the state  because of the lack of
infrastructure  capacity.  Community consensus based long range planning efforts
recently have been undertaken in northern Palm Beach County. These efforts are a
recognition of the pause in growth that has occurred and over time will help the
area  accommodate new development.  More recently  improved  infrastructure  and
access in Southwest Broward has fueled development there.

         Southwest Florida has emerged as a strong growth market.  Traditionally
very retirement  oriented,  the region's economy has begun to diversify  through
increased employment opportunities and migration southward of citrus production.
Increased  employment  opportunity  has  occurred due to the overall size of the
market and improvements in  infrastructure  capacity,  notably the completion of
Interstate 75 in Collier County and the Southwest  Regional  Airport  located in
Fort Myers. The improvement in transportation access also has helped tourism and
as a result indirectly buoyed population growth rates by providing  exposure and
increased  awareness of the region as a retirement  destination  among visitors.
The State of Florida has  committed to building its tenth public  university  in
Lee County, near the Fort Myers airport.  The university will accommodate 10,000
students within a decade and provide  opportunities for synergy between industry
and education. Finally, recent updates to the Lee County comprehensive plan have
been beneficial with respect to growth  management and policy revisions that are
more accommodating of future growth and development.

         Central Florida is a premier world-class  resort/vacation  destination.
The  presence of Disney  World,  studio theme parks and other  tourist  oriented
recreational  parks drives the Central Florida economy.  While the total size of
the market has grown rapidly, the economy is dependent on tourism and population
growth.  Locally,  the  tourism  industry  has been more  stable and seen better
growth over the past three  decades  than either the  manufacturing  or services
section.  Two  additional  local  industry  concentrations,   the  laser/optical
research node and motion  picture  industries are helping to diversify the local
economy.  Universal Studios has announced an expansion of its motion picture and
theme park  facilities.  Expansion  began in 1995 and will employ an  additional
14,000  workers  when  completed.  Disney  World  has also  financed  and  begun
construction   of  its  fourth  theme  park  covering  500  acres  and  adjacent
residential and commercial developments. Strong growth in tourism and large land
areas  available  for  expansion  suggest  this  region  will  lead the state in
population  growth  through  the mid to late  1990s.  International  tourism has
fueled  the  growth  of an  international  retirement  and  second  home  market
throughout Florida.  Today, in the tourist areas of the market, one fifth of new
homes  built are sold to foreign  retirees or vacation  home  owners.  Places of
origin include England,  Germany, South America, and Puerto Rico.  International
retirement markets are also growing in Southwest

                                       23
<PAGE>

and Southeast Florida.

         North Florida is rural in many areas. Jacksonville is the major city in
North  Florida.  The  local  economy  is  dominated  by the  logging  and  paper
industries,  defense and  retirement.  The insurance  industry also has a strong
presence  in  Jacksonville.  Growth in North  Florida  peaked in the  mid-1980s,
coinciding with the military defense buildup,  prior to the full  implementation
of growth management  legislation.  As urbanization and living costs increase in
the south and  central  parts of the  state,  population  growth  from  national
retirement migration sources are increasing.

         The Florida Panhandle is quite rural with reliance on tourism,  defense
and state government for employment  opportunities.  This areas of the state has
the lowest per capita incomes and the smallest volume of population growth. With
the  uncertainty of state budget funding in recent years and continuing  defense
cutbacks,  strong  growth in this region of the state is not  expected.  Coastal
counties,  however,  remain  attractive to continued  economic  development  and
retirement migration because of the pristine beaches along the Gulf of Mexico.

         In general,  pursuant to the Florida Constitution and certain statutory
provisions,  there are two basic types of obligations  that may be issued in the
State of Florida: general obligation bonds and revenue bonds.

         General  obligation bonds are also known as full faith and credit bonds
because their  repayment is based on the general  credit and taxing power of the
borrowing  government.  The ad valorem tax is the most common  source of revenue
pledged for the  repayment of general  obligation  bonds.  Being  tax-supported,
general  obligation  bonds are typically used to finance the capital  portion of
tax supported  general purpose  governmental  projects,  with public  buildings,
roads,  criminal  justice  facilities,  and schools being the most common.  Only
units of local  government  with  taxing  power can levy and  collect ad valorem
taxes. The State of Florida has no ad valorem taxing power.  General  obligation
bonds  payable from ad valorem taxes and maturing more than twelve months (other
than certain  refunding  bonds) after issuance may be issued to finance  capital
projects authorized by law and only if the issuance of such bonds is approved by
the qualified electors.

         Revenue bonds are  obligations  of a unit of government  payable solely
from the revenues of a particular enterprise,  such as a water and sewer system,
or from the revenues derived from a particular  facility or user, or from non-ad
valorem revenues,  such as the sales tax, or from other special funds authorized
to be pledged as  additional  security.  Revenue  bonds may also be payable from
non-specific   revenues  budgeted  each  year  by  the  issuer.  Unlike  general
obligation bonds,  revenue bonds do not constitute a debt of the issuing unit or
a pledge of its faith and credit, and they are not backed by the issuer's taxing
power.

         A test was  developed by the Florida  Supreme  Court for  analyzing the
constitutional  ability of an issuer to issue  revenue bonds where a significant
portion of the proceeds would be used for private or  non-governmental  benefit.
Generally, these types of securities are referred to as industrial revenue bonds
or private activity bonds. Unless a particular use for the proceeds of a private
activity bond has been  constitutionally  or  legislatively  sanctioned (such as
multifamily and single family housing revenue bonds) or tested in the courts,  a
determination  must be made that

                                       24
 
<PAGE>

the project to be financed  with the proceeds of the private  activity bond will
serve a paramount  public  purpose.  The paramount  public  purpose  doctrine is
designed to protect public funds from being  exploited in assisting or promoting
private  ventures  when the  public  would be, at the  most,  only  incidentally
benefited.

         Generally,  an  issuer  may  pledge  something  less  than  all  of its
available  non-ad  valorem  revenues  without  voter  approval,  subject  to the
parameters  established by the Florida Supreme Court. The Florida Supreme Court,
in Volusia v. State,  417 So.2d 968 (Fla.  1982),  refused to  validate  capital
improvement  bonds which were to be used for the  construction of a new jail and
which were secured by a pledge of all legally available,  unencumbered  revenues
of the  county  other  than its ad  valorem  taxes,  and by a further  pledge to
maintain the programs and projects  from which the  unencumbered  revenues  were
derived.  The Court  held  that the  practical  effect  of such a pledge  was to
require  increased ad valorem taxes. The Court reasoned that a general pledge of
all available non-ad valorem revenues and the covenant by the issuer to maintain
the source of such non-ad valorem  revenues was thought to have more than a mere
incidental  affect on the ad valorem taxing power of an issuer,  and therefore a
bond  referendum  would be  required.  The Florida  Supreme  Court,  in State v.
Brevard County, 539 So.2d 461 (Fla. 1989), however, confirmed a lower court bond
validation where a county's  obligations to make payments under a lease-purchase
arrangement  were to be secured solely by non-ad valorem  revenues  budgeted for
such purpose during any fiscal year. The  arrangement  did not violate the State
Constitutional provision requiring voter approval in issuing the certificates of
indebtedness since the County did not also covenant to maintain the programs and
projects from which the non-ad valorem revenues were to be derived.

         The Florida courts have validated debt obligations commonly referred to
as certificates of participation or "COPS." In a typical COPS  transaction,  the
issuer  leases  either  real  or  personal   property  from  a  special  purpose
corporation.  The special  purpose  corporation  assigns its rights to the lease
payments to a corporate  trustee who in turn issues  certificates  evidencing an
undivided  proportionate  interest of the owners of such certificates to receive
the lease  payments.  The lease  payments made by the issuer may be derived from
both ad valorem and non-ad valorem  revenues of the issuer.  Although ad valorem
taxes can be used to make the lease payments, the Florida Supreme Court has held
that a referendum is not required  because the obligation to make lease payments
is an annual obligation subject to renewal each year. If the issuing body elects
not to renew its  lease  for the next  succeeding  year and  therefore  fails to
appropriate the necessary moneys to make lease payments, the holders of the COPS
would be limited to the remedies available under the lease. At least one Florida
court has upheld the right of a  governmental  unit to not  exercise  the annual
renewal option of its lease.

         When a  mortgage,  with a right  of  foreclosure,  on real or  personal
property  (owned by a unit of government) is given to secure a bond, the Florida
courts have held that a pledge of such  mortgage  requires  voter  approval.  In
effect, ad valorem taxes are indirectly pledged because,  as the Florida Supreme
Court reasoned,  the legislative  body affected by such  foreclosure  might feel
"morally  compelled"  to levy  taxes  to  prevent  the  loss of  assets  through
foreclosure.  As a result,  the majority of revenue bonds issued in the State of
Florida are not additionally secured by a mortgage on the governmental  property
being financed.  This prohibition is applicable even if the issuer has no taxing
power.

                                       25
<PAGE>


         In  Florida,  the  Division  of Bond  Finance  has  authority  over the
issuance of State bonds  pledging the full faith and credit of the State and the
issuance of revenue bonds  payable  solely from funds derived from sources other
than State tax revenues or rents or fees paid from State tax revenues.

         Pursuant to the Florida  Constitution,  moneys  sufficient  to pay debt
service on State bonds must be appropriated as the same become due. Furthermore,
to the extent necessary, all State tax revenues, other than trust funds, must be
available for such appropriation purposes.

         At the November 1994 general election,  voters in the State approved an
amendment  to the  Florida  Constitution  limiting  the  amount of taxes,  fees,
licenses and charges  imposed by the State and collected  during any fiscal year
to the amount of revenues  allowed for the prior fiscal year, plus an adjustment
for growth.  Growth is defined as the amount equal to the average annual rate of
growth in Florida personal income over the most recent twenty quarters times the
State revenues  allowed for the prior fiscal year. The revenues  allowed for any
fiscal year can be increased by a two-thirds vote of the State Legislature.  The
limit is effective  starting  with fiscal year  1995-1996.  Any excess  revenues
generated will be deposited in the budget  stabilization  fund until it is fully
funded and then refunded to taxpayers. Included among the categories of revenues
which are exempt from the proposed  revenue  limitation,  however,  are revenues
pledged to state bonds and charges for  services  imposed by local,  regional or
school district governing bodies.

         The total outstanding  principal of State bonds pledging the full faith
and credit of the State may not exceed  fifty  percent of the total tax revenues
of the State for the two preceding fiscal years, excluding any tax revenues held
in trust.

         State  bonds  pledging  the full faith and credit of the State,  except
certain  refunding  bonds,  generally may be issued only to finance or refinance
the cost of State fixed capital outlay projects subject to approval by a vote of
the  electors.  However,  State bonds  pledging the full faith and credit of the
State may be issued without a referendum to finance the  construction of air and
water pollution control and abatement and solid waste disposal  facilities to be
operated by a political subdivision of the State or by an agency of the State.

         All forms of taxation  other than ad valorem taxes are preempted to the
State,  except  as  provided  by  general  law.  The  State is  prohibited  from
collecting ad valorem  taxes,  which are taxes that are levied on real estate or
tangible personal property.

         Revenue  bonds may be issued by the State of  Florida  or its  agencies
without  voter  approval  only to finance or refinance the cost of state capital
projects  payable  solely from funds  derived from sources  other than state tax
revenues or rents or fees paid from state tax revenues.

         Bonds  issued  pursuant  to the  State  Bond Act must be  validated  in
accordance  with Florida  Statutes.  Once an issuer decides to finance a project
with bonds issued pursuant to the State Bond Act, a bond  validation  proceeding
is held in  circuit  court to  determine  whether  the  proposed  bond  issuance
complies with Florida law. The court makes  findings on the questions of whether
the issuing  body had the power to incur  bonded  debt and whether it  exercised
that  power in  accordance  with the law.  The court  may not  weigh the  fiscal
feasibility of the proposed bonds in

                                       26
 

<PAGE>

the  validation  determination.  The  circuit  court  judgment  is  final on all
matters,  other than  constitutional  issues,  raised at the validation  hearing
after time for appeal to the  Supreme  Court of Florida has  elapsed.  Refunding
bonds and bonds issued to finance or refinance  capital outlay  projects for the
system of public education are not required to be validated.

         The legislature has the power to confer on political  subdivisions  the
power to issue bonds, notes and other forms of indebtedness, except as otherwise
restricted  by State and federal  constitutional  provisions,  and such power is
conferred on  municipal  corporations,  cities,  counties and a variety of other
specially  created  districts  and  authorities.  The  bond  validation  process
described  above is also  available to such units of local  government.  In most
cases, bond validations are not statutorily mandated and many general obligation
and revenue bond issues have not been validated.

         Generally,  the Florida  Constitution and Florida Statutes require that
the budget of the State and that of the units of local  government  in the State
be kept in balance from currently available revenues during each fiscal year. If
revenues collected during a fiscal year are less than anticipated,  expenditures
must be reduced in order to comply with the balanced budget requirement.

         Florida  Statutes  provide for a statewide  maximum bond  interest rate
which is flexible  with the bond market and from which are exempted  bonds rated
in one of the three highest ratings by nationally  recognized  rating  services.
Nevertheless,   upon  request  of  a  governmental  unit,  the  State  Board  of
Administration  may  authorize a rate of interest in excess of the maximum rate,
provided  relevant  financial data and  information  relating to the sale of the
bonds is submitted to the State Board.

         The  Florida  Sunshine  Law,  among  other  things,   precludes  public
officials  from meeting with respect to the issuance of bonds other than at duly
noticed public meetings of the  governmental  entity.  These provisions apply to
all meetings of any board or commission of any State agency or authority,  or of
any county,  municipal  corporation,  or political  subdivision.  No resolution,
rule,  or  formal  action  is  considered  binding  except as taken at such duly
noticed public meetings.

         Georgia.  The state  government  of Georgia  has one of the lowest debt
levels,  per capita, of all states in the United States,  which is reflective of
the very  conservative  fiscal approach taken by elected state  officials,  even
through  the  state  has  enjoyed  a strong  economy  over  the past few  years.
Typically,  general  obligation  bonds of the state are issued  pursuant  to the
powers granted under Article VII, Section IV of the Constitution of the State of
Georgia (the  "Georgia  Constitution"),  which  provides  that the bonds are the
direct and general  obligations of the state. The key language is provided under
Article VII, Section IV, Paragraph VI of the Georgia Constitution which provides
as follows:

        "The full faith, credit and taxing power of the state are hereby pledged
        to the payment of all public debt  incurred  under this  article and all
        such debt and the  interest  on the debt shall be exempt  from  taxation
        (emphasis added). Such debt may be validated by judicial


                                       27
  
<PAGE>

         proceedings  in the manner  provided by law. Such  validation  shall be
         incontestable and conclusive."

The Georgia Constitution further mandates that the General Assembly "shall raise
by taxation and appropriate each fiscal year . . . such amounts as are necessary
to pay debt service  requirements in such fiscal year on all general  obligation
debt." The Georgia  Constitution  further  provides for the  establishment  of a
special trust fund which is designated the "State of Georgia General  Obligation
Debt  Sinking  Fund"  which is used  for the  payment  of  annual  debt  service
requirements on all general obligation debt.

         There are debt  limitations  provided  under  Article VII,  Section IV,
Paragraph  II(b)-(e) of the Georgia  Constitution which essentially provide that
the  cumulative  annual  debt  service  for  both  general  obligation  debt and
guaranteed revenue debt shall not exceed 10% of the total revenue receipts, less
refunds paid to the state treasury in the fiscal year immediately  preceding the
proposed  issuance of any new debt.  The Georgia  Constitution  prohibits  state
departments and agencies from  circumventing  the debt limitation  provisions by
not  allowing  such  agencies  to  execute  contracts  which  may be  deemed  to
constitute a security for bonds or other public  obligations.  (See Article VII,
Section IV, Paragraph IV of the Georgia Constitution.)

         The State of Georgia  may  incur:  "Public  debt to supply a  temporary
deficit  in the  state  treasury  in any  fiscal  year  created  by a  delay  in
collecting the taxes of that year. Such debt shall not exceed, in the aggregate,
5% of the total revenue  receipts,  less refunds,  of the state  treasury in the
fiscal year immediately preceding the year in which such debt is incurred." (See
Georgia  Constitution,  Article  VII,  Section IV,  Paragraph  I(b).) Since this
provision  of the  Constitution  was enacted,  there has been no temporary  debt
incurred by the state.

         Virtually all debt obligations represented by bonds issued by the State
of Georgia, counties or municipalities or other public subdivisions,  and public
authorities require validation by a judicial proceeding prior to the issuance of
such obligation.  The judicial validation makes these obligations  incontestable
and conclusive, as provided under the Georgia Constitution.

         The State of Georgia  operates on a fiscal year beginning on July 1 and
ending on June 30. Each year the State  Economist,  the  Governor  and the State
Revenue  Commissioner jointly prepare a revenue forecast upon which is based the
state budget which is  considered,  amended and approved by the Georgia  General
Assembly.  On June 30, 1994 the state had a revenue  shortfall  reserve  fund of
$267,195,474.  Total net revenue  collections for the fiscal year ending on June
30, 1995 were $9,115,243,249, which represented a 7.9% increase over fiscal year
1994  collections of  $8,444,864,060.  Additionally,  Georgia received in fiscal
year 1995,  $502,286,000  in revenue from the Georgia Lottery  Corporation;  all
lottery revenues being earmarked for educational expenditures.

         Georgia has a very bright economic  future  highlighted by a $2 billion
stimulus to the economy  which is expected  from  Atlanta's  hosting of the 1996
Summer  Olympic  Games.  Manufacturing  activity,  particularly  in the textile,
apparel and carpet sectors, has increased  dramatically as a result of increased
home building. The real estate/construction industry appears to be emerging from
a recession that had been caused by over-building of commercial office space


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<PAGE>

and industrial parks in the late 1980s. In recent years, Georgia has enjoyed the
economic  stimulus  caused by a number  of major  corporate  relocations  led by
United Parcel Service of America,  Inc., which moved its World Headquarters from
Greenwich,  Connecticut,  to Atlanta.  This move was followed shortly by Holiday
Inn Worldwide, which moved its headquarters to Atlanta from Memphis.

         On December 6, 1994,  the United  States  Supreme  Court  reversed  the
Georgia  Supreme  Court's  decision in Reich v. Collins,  263 Ga. 602 (1993) and
held that Georgia resident federal retirees were entitled to refunds of pre-1989
taxes on federal retirement pension benefits.  In response,  the Governor signed
H.B. 90 on February 1, 1995,  permitting federal retirees who file timely claims
to receive  refunds  for such  taxes for tax years  1985-1988.  Total  potential
liability is  approximately  $110,000,000  which is now being paid in four equal
annual installments,  the first of which occurred on October 15, 1995. The Reich
case has now been dismissed.

         The United  States  Supreme  Court in the decision of Bacchus  Imports,
Ltd. v. Dias, 468 U.S. 263 (1994),  held that a Georgia statute  assessing lower
alcoholic beverage taxes against domestic producers than out-of-state  producers
was unconstitutional.  In the wake of Bacchus,  James B. Beam Distilling Company
v. State, 501 U.S. 529 (decided June 20, 1991) held that out-of-state  producers
had a right to assert claims for refunds for the unlawful alcohol beverage taxes
levied against them, but that the enforceability of such claims would be subject
to state  statutes of  limitations  and other  procedural  bars. On remand,  the
Fulton  County  Superior  Court  held that  statutes  of  limitations  and other
procedural bars would preclude Beam's  recovery for refunds,  where  applicable.
After having its writ of certiorari  denied by the United States  Supreme Court,
Beam has filed a  petition  for  rehearing,  which has been  denied.  Currently,
Georgia's  statute  of  limitations  (O.C.G.A.  ss.  48-2-85)  has  run  on  all
applicable  pre-Bacchus  claims for  refund  except  for five  claims  currently
pending, which seek tax refunds in the amount of $31,700,000, plus interest.

         Age International,  Inc. v. State,  Fulton County Superior Court, Civil
Case Number  E-3793,  and Age  International,  Inc.  v.  Miller,  Fulton  County
Superior Court,  Civil Case Number E-25073 were filed by out-of-state  producers
of alcoholic beverages seeking (i) refunds totaling  $119,000,000.00 for alcohol
import taxes imposed under Georgia's  post-Bacchus statute (O.C.G.A. ss. 3-4-60)
and  (ii)  declaratory  and  injunctive  relief.  These  claims  account  for an
estimated 99% of all such taxes paid pursuant to the statute and which would not
be barred by the statute of  limitations.  The refund cases are still pending in
the trial court.  The  declaratory/injunctive  relief case was  dismissed by the
District Court,  such dismissal being affirmed by the Eleventh  Circuit Court of
Appeals;  a  petition  for  rehearing  was denied  therefore  giving the state a
favorable verdict on this issue.

         Local school boards have filed suit against  Georgia in Board of Public
Education  for  Savannah/Chatham  County  v.  State of  Georgia,  United  States
District  Court,  Civil Case  Number  CV-490-101  and DeKalb  County v. State of
Georgia, State of Georgia Court of Appeals, Civil Case Number 95-9149. The local
school  boards have  contested the manner in which  desegregation  policies were
implemented.  In Savannah/Chatham County, the Savannah Board originally sued for
$30,000,000,   challenging  the  application  of  state  desegregation   funding
formulae, but the District Court approved a formula requiring a State payment of
approximately

                                       29

<PAGE>


$8,900,000 through and including June 30, 1994. The local school boards appealed
the decision to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals. A preliminary  settlement
has been  reached,  in which  the  state  has paid  $8,925,000  and  discussions
continue on a proposed formula for allocating student  transportation  costs and
additional  payments  may have to be made  depending  on the final  agreement on
costs  accruing  during  the  settlement  negotiations.  In DeKalb  County,  the
plaintiffs  filed suit for  $67,500,000 on a related  issue;  the District Court
held the  funding  formula  was  contrary  to state  law.  The  Court  reduced a
potential state funding obligation of $34,000,000 to approximately  $28,000,000.
Notices of appeal,  however,  have been filed with the Eleventh Circuit Court of
Appeals. Approximately five school districts may file similar claims.

         Leslie  K.  Johnsen  v.  Collins,  filed in  Chatham  County,  involved
constitutional  challenges to Georgia's  transfer  ("impact") fee (O.C.G.A.  ss.
40-3-31.1)  was  challenged  under  the  commerce  clause.  This  case  has been
voluntarily  dismissed and the  plaintiff has joined in a similar  lawsuit which
was filed in the  Superior  Court of Fulton  County  (Mueller v.  Collins).  The
aggregate  potential  liability of the state is estimated to be $20,600,835  for
the period from May, 1992 to February 15, 1995.  Since June 7, 1995, all amounts
have been paid into an escrow  account and  collections  continue at the rate of
$500,000 to $600,000 per month.

         On February 9, 1996 the Georgia  General  Assembly  repealed the import
fee statute and this has effectively  eliminated the legal obligation to collect
the fees.  The escrow  account as of  February  12,  1996  contained  a total of
$3,813,574  which could be used to partially fund refund claims depending on the
ultimate outcome of the Mueller case.

         In Daniel W. Tedder v. Marcus E. Collins, Sr., a class action was filed
in the Cobb County Superior Court challenging a revenue  regulation  authorizing
the  collections on sales tax on sales of used  transportation  equipment  where
neither the buyer nor the seller was engaged in the "regular business" of buying
or selling such  tangible  property.  The trial court  declared  the  regulation
invalid.  Accordingly,  $21,900,000  in refunds have been paid,  with a possible
aggregate  exposure of $30,000,000,  plus interest.  The revenue  regulation has
been rescinded.

         On  September  1,  1994,  the case of  Buskirk  and  Estill v. State of
Georgia, et al., was filed in the Superior Court of Fulton County Georgia,  Case
No. E-31547,  purportedly to be filed on behalf of all "Classified  employees of
the State of  Georgia  or its  agencies  and  departments  during all or part of
fiscal years 1992  through  1995,  who are eligible to receive  within grade pay
increases  and who would have  received  same were it not for a freeze of within
grade pay increases." The case is pending and discovery completed.  The Attorney
General's  Office believes that the State has an adequate defense to all claims,
but in the event the plaintiffs are successful,  the potential  liability to the
State for these retroactive pay raises could be as much as $295 million.

         On August 2, 1995, a petition was filed in Dekalb County Superior court
(Civil Action File No.  95-10114-4)  by the Lombard  Corporation  against Marcus
Collins,  Commissioner of the Georgia Department of Revenue,  and Tom Scott, Tax
Commissioner for Dekalb County. This petition attacks the  constitutionality  of
the Georgia  intangibles  tax. In the event the  intangibles  tax is found to be
unconstitutional,  the financial impact on the State will be marginal,  but city
and

                                       30

<PAGE>

county governments,  as well as local Boards of Education, will collectively
lose approximately $40 million per year in intangibles tax revenues.

         On February 21, 1996,  the United States  Supreme Court ruled a similar
North Carolina  intangibles tax facially  discriminatory and unconstitutional in
the case of Fulton  Corporation v. Janice H.  Faulkner,  Secretary of Revenue of
North Carolina, Case No. 94-1239. It is expected that the judicial ruling in the
Lombard case will follow this United  States  Supreme  Court  decision,  and the
Georgia intangibles tax will be found to be unconstitutional.  There is a chance
that the Court in the Lombard case will sever the intrastate exemption for stock
owned in Georgia  corporations,  and uphold the balance of the  intangibles  tax
stature.

         The above-referenced information is based on available public documents
and oral  representations  made by  officials  at the State  Attorney  General's
Office,  the Georgia  Department  of Revenue and  contained  in the  Significant
Contingent  Liability  representation  made  in a  recent  Preliminary  Official
Statement accompanying a September 1995 State of Georgia General Obligation Bond
issue.

         Maryland.  The public  indebtedness  of the State of  Maryland  and its
instrumentalities  is divided  into three  basic  categories.  The State  issues
general  obligation bonds, to the payment of which the State ad valorem property
tax  is  exclusively   pledged,   for  capital   improvements  and  for  various
State-sponsored  projects.  The Maryland  Department  of  Transportation  issues
limited,  special obligation bonds for transportation purposes payable primarily
from  specific,  fixed-rate  excise taxes and other  revenues  related mainly to
highway use. Certain  authorities issue obligations payable solely from specific
non-tax,  enterprise fund revenues, and for which the State has no liability and
has given no moral obligation  assurance.  The State and certain of its agencies
also have entered  into a variety of lease  purchase  agreements  to finance the
acquisition  of capital  assets.  These lease  agreements  specify that payments
thereunder are subject to annual appropriation by the General Assembly.

         At  least  since  the end of the  Civil  War,  the  State  has paid the
principal of and interest on its general  obligation bonds when due. Neither the
Maryland Constitution nor the public general laws of Maryland impose any general
debt limit.  Although the State has the authority to make short-term  borrowings
in anticipation of taxes and other receipts up to a maximum of $100 million, the
State in the past has not issued  short-term tax anticipation  notes or made any
other similar  short-term  borrowings for cash flow purposes.  The State has not
issued bond  anticipation  notes except in  connection  with a State  program to
ameliorate the impact of the failure of certain State-chartered savings and loan
associations in 1985; all such notes were redeemed without the issuance of debt.

         The State  Constitution  prohibits the contracting of State debt unless
authorized  by a law  providing  for the  collection  of an annual  tax or taxes
sufficient to pay the interest when due and to discharge the principal within 15
years of the date of debt  issuance.  The  Constitution  also  provides that the
taxes  levied  for this  purpose  may not be  repealed  or  applied to any other
purpose  until the debt is fully  discharged.  As a matter of practice,  general
obligation bonds,  other than small  denomination bonds and refunding bonds, are
issued to mature in serial installments

                                       31

<PAGE>


designed to provide  payment of interest  only during the first two years and an
approximately  level  annual  amortization  of principal  and interest  over the
remaining years.

         The  State  has  financed  and  expects  to  continue  to  finance  the
construction  and  acquisition  of  various  facilities  and  equipment  through
conditional purchase, sale-leaseback, and similar transactions. All of the lease
payments under these  arrangements  are subject to annual  appropriation  by the
General Assembly.  In the event that  appropriations are not made, the State may
not be held  contractually  liable  for the  payments.  These  transactions  are
subject to approval by the Board of Public Works.

         1994  Budget  -- On April 5, 1993 the  General  Assembly  approved  the
Budget for fiscal year 1994.  The 1994 Budget  Program of $12.5  billion is 3.4%
above the  spending  level for 1993.  The 1994 Budget does not include any funds
for employee cost-of-living increases or selective salary adjustments,  but does
include  funds for  employee  in-grade  salary  increments.  The Budget does not
include any proposed expenditures  dependent upon additional revenue from new or
broad-based  taxes; the only additional  revenues are to be derived from fees in
the health care and insurance regulation areas.

         The  operating  budget for fiscal year 1994 is to be funded with $6,499
million in general funds,  $3,221 million in special and higher education funds,
and  $2,752  million  in  federal  funds.  The  1994  Budget,  according  to the
Department of Fiscal Services,  is within the spending level  recommended by the
Spending Affordability Committee.

         1995 Budget -- On April 5, 1994,  the  General  Assembly  approved  the
budget for fiscal  year 1995.  The Budget  includes,  among  other  things:  (i)
sufficient  funds to meet all  specific  statutory  funding  requirements;  (ii)
sufficient funds to meet the actuarily  recommended  contributions for the seven
retirement systems, determined on a basis consistent with prior years' practice;
(iii)  sufficient  general funds for the Annuity Bond Fund to maintain the State
property tax rate at 21(cent) per $100 of assessed valuation;  (iv) $2.6 billion
in aid to local governments (reflecting a $102.4 million increase over 1994 that
provides for substantial increases in education,  health, and police aid); (v) a
$20 million general fund  appropriation to the Dedicated  Purpose Account of the
State  Reserve  Fund to reduce the  liabilities  for the State  Employee  Health
Insurance   program;   and  (vi)  $104.8  million  in  general  fund  deficiency
appropriations  for fiscal year 1994, of which $60.5 million is an appropriation
to the Revenue  Stabilization  Account of the State  Reserve Fund as  previously
mandated by the General  Assembly.  The Budget includes $59.6 million in general
funds for a 3% employee  cost-of-living  adjustment  with a minimum  increase of
$800 per employee.

         The  operating  budget is to be funded with  $6,886  million in general
funds,  $2,396 million in special funds,  $1,154 in higher  education funds, and
$2,935 million in federal funds.

         The State's fiscal year 1995 capital  program is to be funded with $380
million in general obligation bonds, $54.6 million in general funds appropriated
in the operating  budget,  $943.9 million in special and federal funds (of which
$774.6  million is  appropriated  to the Department of  Transportation),  $201.7
million in revenue  bonds,  and $23.5  million in  reappropriated  prior  years'
capital  appropriations.  The general  obligation bond financed program

                                       32

<PAGE>

includes $170 million for State facilities, $82 million for the construction and
renovation  of local  elementary  and  secondary  schools,  and $128 million for
various other grants and loan projects.

         When the 1995 budget was  enacted,  it was  estimated  that the general
fund surplus on a budgetary basis at June 30, 1995, would be approximately  $9.7
million;  the  current  estimate is $49.5  million,  which  reflects  the actual
general fund surplus on a budgetary basis at June 30, 1994, of $60.0 million. In
addition,   it  is  currently   estimated   that  the  balance  in  the  Revenue
Stabilization Account of the State Reserve fund at June 30, 1995, will be $223.6
million.  Current statute requires the Governor to include as part of the budget
submitted at the 1995  Session of the General  Assembly an  appropriation  in an
amount equivalent to the general fund surplus at June 30, 1994. The estimates of
the general  fund  surplus and balance in the Revenue  Stabilization  Account at
June 30, 1995, assume that the required  appropriation will be effective July 1,
1995.

         1996 Budget--On April 1, 1995, the General Assembly approved the Budget
for fiscal year 1996. The Budget  includes,  among other things:  (i) sufficient
funds to meet all specific statutory funding requirements; (ii) sufficient funds
to  meet  the  actuarily  recommended  contributions  for the  seven  retirement
systems,  determined on a basis  consistent  with prior years'  practice;  (iii)
sufficient  general  funds  for the  Annuity  Bond  Fund to  maintain  the State
property tax rate at $0.21 per $100 of assessed valuation;  (iv) $2.8 billion in
aid to local  governments  (reflecting a $161 million  increase over fiscal year
1995 that provides for substantial  increases in education,  health,  and police
aid); (v) a $270 million general fund  appropriation  to the State Reserve Fund,
$200 million of which is appropriated to the Revenue Stabilization  Account; and
(vi) $134.1 million in general fund  deficiency  appropriations  for fiscal year
1995,  of which $60 million is an  appropriation  to the  Revenue  Stabilization
Account  of the  State  Reserve  Fund  as  previously  mandated  by the  General
Assembly.  The Budget  also  includes  $39  million  in  general  funds for a 2%
employee cost-of-living adjustment.

         The  operating  budget for fiscal year 1996 is to be funded with $7,394
million in general funds,  $3,918 million in special and higher education funds,
and $3,299 million in federal funds.

         The State's  fiscal year 1996 capital  program is proposed to be funded
with $390 million in general  obligation  bonds,  $93.5 million in general funds
appropriated in the operating budget,  $1,244.6 in special and federal funds (of
which  $1,055.2 is  appropriated  to the Department of  Transportation),  $131.9
million in revenue  bonds,  and $21.0  million in  reappropriated  prior  years'
capital  appropriations.  The proposed general  obligation bond financed program
includes $152 million for State facilities, $83 million for the construction and
renovation  of local  elementary  and  secondary  schools,  and $155 million for
various other grants and loan projects.

         When the 1996 Budget was  enacted,  it was  estimated  that the general
fund surplus on a budgetary basis at June 30, 1996, would be approximately  $7.8
million; it is currently estimated to be $1.0 million. At its December 12, 1995,
meeting, the Board of Revenue Estimates lowered the estimate of fiscal year 1996
general  fund  revenues by $92  million.  The  Governor  has  proposed a plan to
address this change that  principally  includes:  (1) additional  reversions for
Medicaid  and  Nonpublic  Special  Education  Placements  of  $22  million;  (2)
reduction of current general fund  appropriations  of $26 million;  (3) transfer
from  the  Revenue  Stabilization  Account  of  $18  million;  and  (4)  use  of
unanticipated  fiscal year 1995 surplus of $26 million.  It is anticipated  that
the

                                       33

<PAGE>

balance of the  Revenue  Stabilization  Account  after the  transfer at June 30,
1996, will be $500 million.

         The Adviser  believes that the information  summarized  above describes
some of the more  significant  matters  relating  to the  Maryland  Intermediate
Municipal  Bond Fund and  Maryland  Municipal  Bond  Fund.  The  sources  of the
information are the official  statements of issuers  located in Maryland,  other
publicly available  documents,  and oral statements from various state agencies.
The Adviser has not independently  verified any of the information  contained in
the official statements,  other publicly available documents, or oral statements
from various state agencies.

         North Carolina. The North Carolina Constitution requires that the total
expenditures of the State for the fiscal period covered by the budget not exceed
the total  receipts  during the fiscal period plus any surplus  remaining in the
State  Treasury at the beginning of the period.  The State  operates on a fiscal
year ending June 30th.

         Economic  growth in North  Carolina  continued  in 1995,  although at a
somewhat slower pace than in recent years.  The total real  (inflation-adjusted)
output of goods and services in North  Carolina is  estimated to have  increased
3.6% in 1995,  which is lower than in 1994 and 1993.  Despite the slower  growth
rate, however, the State's overall economic performance in 1995 exceeded that of
the nation.  In addition,  it is forecasted  that North Carolina will have added
approximately  70,000 jobs during  1995.  This number is smaller  than in recent
years and again reflects a slowing of the pace of economic  growth.  The State's
inflation rate remained moderate in 1995. North Carolina is expected to continue
the pattern of slower economic growth in 1996, with the real output of goods and
services in North Carolina increasing between 2.5% and 3% in 1996.

         The fund  balance of the State's  General  Fund grew by $124 million in
1995. The growth in tax and other revenues exceeded  expectations in 1995, which
directly  contributed to the strong condition of the General Fund at fiscal year
end.  Nevertheless,   upward  actuarial  revisions  in  net  projected  Medicaid
liabilities of approximately $31 million,  and cuts of approximately $73 million
to individual  income tax revenues,  were reflected in the balance sheet of June
30,  1995.  At that date,  the fund  balance of the  General  Fund was  $1,024.6
million,  as compared to a $900.6 million  balance at June 30, 1994. The budgets
for the 1995-96  and  1996-97  fiscal  years  project an ending  balance for the
General Fund of $630.3 million and $824.4 million, respectively.

         The  following  are cases  pending in which the State faces the risk of
either a loss of revenue or an unanticipated expenditure.  In the Opinion of the
Department of State Treasurer,  however, any such loss of revenue or expenditure
would not materially  adversely affect the State's ability to meet its financial
obligations.

         Leandro,  et al.  v.  State  of  North  Carolina  and  State  Board  of
Education.  On May 25, 1994,  students and boards of education in five  counties
filed suit requesting a declaration  that the public  education  system of North
Carolina  violates  the State  constitution  by failing to provide  adequate  or
substantially equal education opportunities,  and by denying due process of law.
The

                                       34

<PAGE>

defendants' motion to dismiss was denied and the ruling was appealed.  The North
Carolina Court of Appeals heard oral argument in late January 1996, and a ruling
is expected later this year.

         Francisco  case.  On August 10, 1994, a class action  lawsuit was filed
against  the  Superintendent  of  Public  Instruction  and the  State  Board  of
Education  on  behalf  of  a  class  of  parents  and  their  children  who  are
characterized  as limited  English  proficient.  The complaint  alleges that the
State has failed to provide  funding for the education of these students and has
failed to supervise local school systems in administering programs for them. The
complaint asks the Court to order the defendants to fund a comprehensive program
to  ensure  equal  educational  opportunities  for  limited  English  proficient
children. Discovery is underway but no trial date has been set.

         Swanson case. In Davis v. Michigan (1989), the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
that a Michigan income tax statute which taxed federal retirement benefits while
exempting those paid by state and local governments  violated the constitutional
doctrine of intergovernmental  tax immunity.  At the time of the Davis decision,
North  Carolina law  contained  similar  exemptions  in favor of state and local
retirees.  Those exemptions were repealed prospectively  beginning with the 1989
tax year. Following Davis, federal retirees filed a class action suit in federal
court in 1989 seeking  damages  equal to the North  Carolina  income tax paid on
federal  retirement  income by the class members.  A companion suit was filed in
state court in 1990.  The North  Carolina  Department  of Revenue's  estimate of
refunds and interest  liability is $280.89  million as of June 30, 1994. In 1991
the North Carolina  Supreme Court ruled in favor of the State in the state court
action.  In 1993 the U.S.  Supreme  Court vacated that decision and remanded the
case to the North Carolina  Supreme Court. The North Carolina Supreme Court then
ruled in favor of the State on the grounds that the federal  retirees had failed
to  comply  with  state  procedures  for  challenging   unconstitutional  taxes.
Plaintiffs  petitioned the U.S.  Supreme Court for review of that decision,  but
the U.S. Supreme Court denied their petition.  The U.S. District Court has ruled
in  favor  of  the   defendants  in  the  federal  case,   and  a  petition  for
reconsideration  was denied.  Plaintiffs  appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals,
which upheld the lower federal court's ruling.

         An  additional  lawsuit was filed in mid-1995 in state court by federal
pensioners  seeking to recover  state  income  taxes paid on federal  retirement
benefits. This case grew out of the claims made by the federal pensioners in the
original Swanson federal case. In the new lawsuit,  the plaintiffs  allege that,
when the state granted an increase in retirement  benefits to state  retirees in
the same  legislation  that  equalized tax  treatment  between state and federal
retirees,  the  increased  benefits to state  retirees  constituted  an indirect
violation of Davis. The suit seeks a refund of taxes paid by federal retirees on
federal  retirement  benefits  received  in the years  1989-93  and  refunds  or
monetary  relief  sufficient  to equalize  the alleged  on-going  discriminatory
treatment  for those  years.  This case has been  stayed  pending the outcome in
Bailey (see below).

         Bailey case. State and local  government  retirees filed a class action
suit in 1990 as a result of the repeal of the income  tax  exemptions  for state
and local government retirement benefits.  The original suit was dismissed after
the North Carolina Supreme Court ruled in 1991 that the plaintiffs had failed to
comply with state law  requirements for challenging  unconstitutional  taxes and
the U.S.  Supreme Court denied review.  In the 1992 many of the same  plaintiffs
filed a new lawsuit alleging essentially the same claims. The case went to trial
in March of 1995.

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         On May 31,  1995,  the  court  issued  an order  ruling in favor of the
plaintiffs.  The court found that the repeal of the tax  exemption  on state and
local government  retirement  benefits was null, void and unenforceable and that
retirement  benefits  vested  before  1989 are exempt from  taxation.  The North
Carolina  Attorney  General has  appealed the order,  and it estimates  that the
amount in controversy is approximately $40-45 million annually for the tax years
1989-91.  In addition,  it is anticipated that the decision reached in this case
will govern the  resolution  of tax refund for claims made by retired  state and
local government  employees for taxes paid on retirement  benefit income for tax
years after 1991.  Furthermore,  if the order of the trial court is upheld,  its
provisions  would apply  prospectively  to prevent future  taxation of state and
local government retirement funds that were vested before August 1989.

         Faulkenbury v. Teachers' and State Employees'  Retirement System, Peele
v.  Teachers'  and State  Employees'  Retirement  System,  and  Woodard v. Local
Governmental  Employees'  Retirement System.  Plaintiffs are disability retirees
who brought class actions in state court challenging  changes in the formula for
payment of disability  retirement  benefits and claiming  impairment of contract
rights,  breach of fiduciary  duty,  violation of other  federal  constitutional
rights and violation of state  constitutional  and statutory  rights.  The State
estimates that the cost in damages and higher  prospective  benefit  payments to
plaintiffs  and class members may amount to $50 million or more in  Faulkenbury,
$50  million  in Peele  and $15  million  or more in  Woodard.  Upon  review  in
Faulkenbury,  the North Carolina Court of Appeals and the North Carolina Supreme
Court have held that the claims  made in  Faulkenbury,  which are  substantially
similar  to those  in Peele  and  Woodard,  for  breach  of  fiduciary  duty and
violation  of federal  constitutional  rights  brought  under the Federal  Civil
Rights Act, either do not state a cause of action or are otherwise barred by the
statute of limitations.  In 1994  plaintiffs took voluntary  dismissals of their
claims for impairment of contract  rights in violation of the U.S.  Constitution
and filed new actions in federal  court  asserting  the same  claims  along with
claims for  violation of  constitutional  rights in the  taxation of  retirement
benefits. The remaining State court claims in all of the cases were scheduled to
be heard in May,  1995,  and the trial court ruled against the  defendants.  The
defendants  have given  notice of appeal.  The federal  actions have been stayed
pending resolution of the State claims.

         Fulton Case.  The State's  intangible  personal  property tax levied on
certain shares of stock has been challenged by the plaintiff on the grounds that
it violates the U.S.  Constitution's  commerce clause by discriminating  against
stock issued by corporations  that do all or part of their business  outside the
State. The plaintiff in the action is a North Carolina corporation that paid the
tax on  stock  it owned  in  companies  that  did all or part of their  business
outside the State.  Plaintiff seeks to invalidate the tax in its entirety and to
recover  tax paid on the  value of its  shares in such  corporations.  The North
Carolina  Court of Appeals  invalidated  the taxable  percentage  deduction  and
excised it from the statute beginning with the 1994 tax year; however, the North
Carolina  Supreme Court  reversed the Court of Appeals and  reinstated the trial
court's  ruling,  which had  upheld  the tax as  constitutional,  including  the
taxable  percentage  deduction.  The plaintiffs'  petition for certiorari to the
U.S. Supreme Court was granted, and on February 21, 1996, the U.S. Supreme Court
declared the State's intangibles tax to be  unconstitutional  under the commerce
clause  and  remanded  the case to the  North  Carolina  Supreme  Court  for its
determination of the appropriate remedy for taxes improperly  collected in years
prior to the repeal of the tax.

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         The Adviser  believes that the information  summarized  above describes
some of the more significant matters relating to the North Carolina Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund and North  Carolina  Municipal Bond Fund. The sources of the
information are the official  statements of the Department of State Treasurer of
North  Carolina,  other publicly  available  documents and oral  statements from
various State agencies.  The Adviser has not  independently  verified any of the
information  contained  in the official  statements,  other  publicly  available
documents, or oral statements from various State agencies.

         South  Carolina.  The South Carolina  Constitution  mandates a balanced
budget.  If a deficit  occurs,  the General  Assembly must account for it in the
succeeding  fiscal year. In addition,  if a deficit  appears  likely,  the State
Budget and Control  Board may reduce  appropriations  during the current  fiscal
year as necessary to prevent the deficit.  The State Constitution  limits annual
increases in State  appropriations  to the average growth rate of the economy of
the State and annual  increases in the number of State  employees to the average
growth  of the  population  of the  State;  provided,  however,  that  these two
limitations  are subject to suspension for any one fiscal year by a special vote
in each House of the General Assembly.

         The State  Constitution  requires a General  Reserve  fund that  equals
three percent of General Fund Revenue for the latest completed fiscal year. When
deficits  have  occurred,  the State has funded them out of the General  Reserve
Fund. The State  Constitution  also requires a Capital Reserve Fund equal to two
percent of General Fund Reserve for the latest  completed fiscal year. The State
Constitution  requires  that the  General  Assembly  provide  that,  if  revenue
forecasts  before March 1 project that revenues for the current fiscal year will
be less than  expenditures  authorized by  appropriation  for the current fiscal
year, the current fiscal year's  appropriation to the Capital Reserve Fund shall
first be  reduced  to the  extent  necessary  before  any  reduction  is made in
operating appropriations.  If it is determined that a fiscal year had ended with
an operating deficit,  the State Constitution  requires that monies appropriated
from the  Capital  Reserve  Fund must be  reduced to the  extent  necessary  and
applied to the year end operating  deficit  before  withdrawing  monies from the
General Reserve Fund for such purpose.

         After March 1, monies from the Capital Reserve Fund may be appropriated
by a special  vote of the  General  Assembly  to finance  previously  authorized
capital  improvement  bond  projects,  to retire  principal or interest on bonds
previously  issued,  and to pay for capital  improvements or other  nonrecurring
purposes.   Monies  in  the  Capital  Reserve  Fund  not   appropriated  or  any
appropriation  for a  particular  project or item that has been  reduced  due to
application  of the monies to a  year-end  deficit  must go back to the  General
Fund.

         The State  operates on a fiscal year  beginning  July 1 and ending June
30. For the fiscal year ended June 30, 1995,  the State had a budgetary  surplus
of  $393,000,000,  and the Capital  Reserve  Fund and General  Reserve Fund were
fully  funded at the  combined 5% level.  The South  Carolina  General  Assembly
recently  passed the  Fiscal  Year  1995-96  Appropriations  Act that  enacted a
balanced  budget  where most of the new revenue was  allocated  to property  tax
relief and education.

         A class action lawsuit,  Bass v. State of South  Carolina,  questioning
the State's tax treatment of federal retirement benefits for the tax years 1985,
1986,  1987 and 1988,  has been

                                       37

<PAGE>

settled by  agreement  of the parties and  approved by the Circuit  Court of the
State.  The time for appeal has  expired.  In  addition,  the  General  Assembly
authorized  the  payment of up to  $85,000,000  to the  members of the class and
approximately  $77,000,000 has been paid. The General Assembly,  during the 1994
Session,  enacted  legislation  which  extended the time for filing claims until
August 8, 1994. The State, in October 1995, paid approximately $11,700,000,  and
in October 1996, will pay approximately $11,500,000, for claims filed during the
extended period, which will conclude the State's obligation.

         The Adviser  believes that the information  summarized  above described
some of the more significant matters relating to the South Carolina Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund and South  Carolina  Municipal Bond Fund. The sources of the
information  are the official  statements of issuers  located in South Carolina,
other  publicly  available  documents,  or oral  statements  from various  State
agencies.  The Adviser has not  independently  verified  any of the  information
contained in the official  statements,  other publicly available  documents,  or
oral statements from various State agencies.

         Tennessee.  The  Constitution  of the State of  Tennessee  forbids  the
expenditure of the proceeds of any debt  obligation for a purpose other than the
purpose for which it was authorized by statute.  The  Constitution  also forbids
the  authorization of any debt obligation,  except as shall be repaid within the
fiscal year of issuance,  for current operation of any state service or program.
Under Tennessee law, the term of the State's bonds cannot exceed the life of the
projects  being  financed.  Furthermore,  the amount of debt  obligations of the
State of Tennessee cannot exceed the amount  authorized by the Tennessee General
Assembly.  The  procedure  for funding  State of  Tennessee  debt is provided by
Chapter 9 of Title 9, Tennessee Code  Annotated.  The Funding Board of the State
of Tennessee is the entity authorized to issue general  obligation  indebtedness
of  the  State  of  Tennessee.  Pursuant  to  Section  9-9-106,  Tennessee  Code
Annotated,  the Funding Board of the State of Tennessee has a lien on the taxes,
fees and revenues from certain  designated  revenue  sources for the full amount
required to service the State's general obligation  indebtedness.  Certain other
agencies and  authorities in Tennessee  issue  obligations,  payable solely from
specific non-tax enterprise fund revenues and which are not debts or liabilities
of the State of  Tennessee  nor is the full  faith  and  credit  pledged  to the
payment thereof.

         Under  current  state  statutes,   the  State  of  Tennessee's  general
obligation  bonded debt  issuances  are subject to an annual  legal debt service
limitation  based on a pledged portion of certain  current year revenues.  As of
June 30, 1995, the State of Tennessee's  annual legal debt service limit of $374
million was well above the debt service  required of $112 million,  with a legal
debt service margin of $262 million. Debt per capita equaled $128, and the ratio
of net general  long-term  bonded debt to assessed  property  valuation was 1.25
percent.

         The Constitution of the State of Tennessee  requires a balanced budget.
As required by law, the  legislature  enacted a balanced  budget for fiscal year
1994-95. Beginning January 1, 1994 the State of Tennessee received a waiver from
the federal  government  to replace  Medicaid  with the new  program,  TennCare.
TennCare was implemented to help control the  sky-rocketing  cost of health care
and to  provide  insurance  coverage  not  only to  previous  Medicaid  eligible
individuals but also to uninsured Tennesseans.

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<PAGE>

         Despite the  budgetary  concerns  caused by the costs  associated  with
implementing TennCare, the economic outlook for Tennessee remains favorable. The
State's  economic  diversity  has  improved  substantially  over the last twelve
years.  Investments announced in new and expanding business exceeded one billion
dollars in each of those years and  exceeded  two billion in the last two years.
The $2.5 billion in announced capital  investments in 1994 was the third largest
year and  exceeded  only by the $2.78  billion in 1985 when  Saturn  Corporation
chose  Tennessee  for its  plant  site and 1989  when $3.2  billion  in  capital
investments were announced. This growth created 26,317 new jobs in Tennessee for
the year ended June 1995.  As of June 1995,  the State's  unemployment  rate was
4.8%,  well below the national  average of 6.1%.  The  decision by  Columbia/HCA
Corporation to relocate its headquarters in Tennessee is also expected to have a
significant  positive  impact on future  growth in  Tennessee.  Based on current
projections,  the State's  overall  growth is  expected  to exceed the  national
average into the next century  according to the  Comprehensive  Annual Financial
Report for the State of Tennessee for the year ended June 1995.

         Texas.  The  State  has  long  been  identified  with  the  oil and gas
industry, but the Texas economy has diversified.  Oil and gas related industries
accounted for 27% of the State's total output of goods and services in 1981, but
currently account for only 12% of the State's economy. Service-producing sectors
(which include  transportation  and public utilities;  finance and insurance and
real estate;  trade;  services;  and  government)  are the major  sources of job
growth in Texas.  Texas' location and transportation and accessibility have made
it a  distribution  center  for the  southwestern  United  States  as well as an
international center for finance and distribution.  The high-technology  sector,
growth of exports and manufacturing job growth are expected to be significant to
Texas' future growth.  The State  Comptroller  of Public  Accounts has predicted
that the overall Texas economy will slightly out pace national  economic  growth
in the long term.

         The State generally can be divided into six geo-economic  regions.  The
east  region is a largely  non-metropolitan  region,  in which  the  economy  is
dependent on agricultural  activities and the production and processing of coal,
petroleum and wood.  The  Dallas-Ft.  Worth  metroplex  region is almost totally
metropolitan, with diversified manufacturing,  defense, financial and commercial
sectors. The panhandle,  Permian basin and Concho Valley regions are the largest
and  most  sparsely  populated  areas of the  State,  with an  economy  based on
petroleum production and agriculture.  The border region stretching from El Paso
to Brownsville is characterized by its dependence on trade with Mexico,  tourism
and agriculture.  The gulf coast region is the most populous region in the State
and has an economy  centered on energy services,  petro-chemical  industries and
commercial  activities resulting from agriculture and seaport trade. The economy
of the central  corridor is based upon the public and  private  service  sector,
recreation/tourism  and  manufacturing.  Because the economic  base is different
from region to region,  economic developments,  such as the strength of the U.S.
economy,  shifting export markets or changes in oil prices or defense  spending,
can be expected to affect the economy of each region differently.

         Employment in the State increased  steadily  through the 70's and early
80's. However, in 1986, the Texas economy was battered by a recession induced by
declining  oil  prices  and  a  collapse  in  its  real  estate  industry.   The
unemployment  rate in Texas peaked at 8.9% in 1986.  By the summer of 1988,  the
State had  replaced  jobs lost  during  this  recession,  although  many were in
lower-paying occupations.  Although the Texas economy was slowed by the nation's
1990-91

                                       39

<PAGE>

recession, it did not fall into recession itself. The unemployment rate in Texas
fell more than two percentage  points from 1992 to 1995. Since reaching nearly 8
percent in 1992,  the  unemployment  rate  improved to a rate below 6 percent in
1995.  During the twelve months ending in September,  1995, the Texas Employment
Commission reported total nonfarm employment growth of 3%.

         Most new jobs created in the past year have been in the service  sector
with most of the  growth in the  health,  business  and  miscellaneous  services
sectors.  Employment  during the past year also  increased in the  wholesale and
retail trade,  government,  transportation,  communications,  public  utilities,
manufacturing and construction industries.  Oil and gas mining experienced a job
decline during the past year. The State's per capita personal income compared to
the  national  average  peaked  in 1981 at  approximately  102% of the  national
average but steadily fell to a low of 88% of the national average in 1988-87 and
has since increased to approximately 91% as of 1995.

         The State's  general revenue fund provides an indication of the State's
financial  condition.  Effective as of the  beginning  of fiscal 1994,  numerous
state funds were merged into the general  revenue fund  providing for a one-time
gain of  approximately  $1.2 billion for the fund. In the fiscal year 1995,  the
general revenue fund accounted for most of the state's total revenue. Due to the
state's  expansion  in Medicaid  spending  and other  Health and Human  Services
programs requiring federal matching revenues,  federal receipts were the state's
number one source of income in fiscal 1995.  Sales tax,  which had been the main
source of revenue for the  previous 12 years  prior to fiscal  1993,  dropped to
second.  Licenses, fees, fines and penalties are now the third largest source of
revenue to the state,  with motor  fuels  taxes and motor  vehicle  sales/rental
taxes following as fourth largest and fifth largest, respectively. The remainder
of the state's  revenues are derived  primarily  from  interest  and  investment
income,  lottery  proceeds,  cigarette  and  tobacco,  franchise,  oil  and  gas
severance  and other taxes.  The state has no personal or corporate  income tax,
although the state does impose a corporate  franchise tax based on the amount of
a  corporation's  capital and "earned  surplus,"  which  includes  corporate net
income and officers' and directors'  compensation.  For each of the fiscal years
ended 1991,  1992, 1993, 1994 and 1995 the general revenue fund contained a cash
surplus of approximately $1.005 billion,  $609 million,  $1.623 billion,  $2.239
billion, and $2.110 billion, respectively.

         Virginia.  The  Constitution  of  Virginia,  in  Section 9 of Article X
provides for the issuance of debt by or on behalf of the Commonwealth.  Sections
9(a),  (b) and (c) provide for the issuance of debt to which the  Commonwealth's
full faith and credit is pledged and Section  9(d)  provides for the issuance of
debt not secured by the full faith and credit of the Commonwealth, but which may
be supported by and paid from Commonwealth tax collections. The Commonwealth may
also enter into  leases  and  contracts  that are  classified  on its  financial
statements  as  long-term  indebtedness.  Debt may  also be  issued  by  certain
authorities and institutions of the Commonwealth.

         Section 9(a) of Article X authorizes  general  obligation  debt to meet
certain  types of  emergencies,  to meet  casual  deficits  in the revenue or in
anticipation  of the  collection  of  revenues of the  Commonwealth  (subject to
limits on the amount and  duration of the debt),  and to redeem a previous  debt
obligation  of the  Commonwealth.  Total  indebtedness  issued  to  meet  casual
deficits

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<PAGE>

may not exceed  thirty  percent of an amount  equal to 1.15 times the annual tax
revenues  "derived  from taxes on income and retail  sales,  as certified by the
Auditor of Public Accounts, for the preceding fiscal year."

         Section  9(b) of  Article  X  authorizes  general  obligation  debt for
capital projects.  The outstanding amount of Section 9(b) debt is limited in the
aggregate  to an amount  equal to 1.15 times the  average  annual  tax  revenues
"derived from taxes on income and retail  sales,  as certified by the Auditor of
Public  Accounts,"  for the three  immediately  preceding  fiscal years less the
total  amounts of bonds  outstanding.  The amount of Section  9(b) debt that the
General Assembly may authorize for the current fiscal year is further limited to
25% of the aggregate  Section 9(b) debt limit less Section 9(b) debt  authorized
in the current and prior three fiscal years.  Also,  the debt must be authorized
by a vote of a majority of the members of each house of the General Assembly and
approved in a state-wide election.

         Section  9(c) of  Article  X  authorizes  general  obligation  debt for
revenue-producing  capital projects. The outstanding amount of Section 9(c) debt
is limited in the aggregate to an amount equal to 1.15 times the average  annual
tax revenues "derived from taxes on income and retail sales, as certified by the
Auditor of Public Accounts," for the three  immediately  preceding fiscal years.
This debt must be approved by a vote of  two-thirds of the members of each house
of the General Assembly and approved by the Governor.  The Governor must certify
before the  enactment of the bond  legislation  and again before the issuance of
the bonds that the net  revenues  pledged are expected to be  sufficient  to pay
principal and interest on the bonds issued to finance the projects.

         The phase  "taxes on income  and  retail  sales" is not  defined in the
Constitution  or by statute.  The record  made in the  process of  adopting  the
Constitution,  however,  suggests an  intention  to include  only  income  taxes
payable by individuals, fiduciaries and corporations and the state sales and use
tax.

         Section 9(d) of Article X provides that the  restrictions  of Section 9
are not applicable to any obligation increased by the Commonwealth or any of its
institutions,  agencies  or  authorities  if the full  faith  and  credit of the
Commonwealth  is not pledged or  committed  to the  payment of such  obligation.
Various   types  of  Section  9(d)  revenue  bonds  are  issued  for  which  the
Commonwealth's  full faith and credit is not  pledged.  Certain of these  bonds,
however,  are paid in whole or in part from revenues  received as appropriations
by the General Assembly from general tax revenues,  while others are paid solely
from the revenues derived from enterprises  related to the operation of financed
capital projects.

         The Commonwealth is involved in numerous  agreements to lease buildings
and equipment.  These lease  agreements  are for various  terms,  and each lease
contains a  nonappropriation  clause indicting that continuation of the lease is
subject to funding by the General Assembly. The principal balance of all capital
leases outstanding was $25.8 million as of June 30, 1995.

         The  Commonwealth  also finances the  acquisition  of certain  personal
property and equipment through installment  purchase  agreements.  The length of
the  agreements  and  the  interest  rates  charged  vary.  In most  cases,  the
agreements are  collateralized by the personal

                                       41

<PAGE>

property  and  equipment  acquired.   Installment  purchase  agreements  contain
nonappropriation   clauses  indicating  that  continuation  of  the  installment
purchase is subject to funding by the General Assembly. The principal balance of
installment  purchase  obligations  outstanding was $42.2 million as of June 30,
1995.

         Virginia operates on a two-year budget.

         On December 20, 1993, Governor Wilder presented the Budget Bill for the
1994-96 Biennium. A new governor,  George Allen, was elected on November 7, 1993
and took  office on January  15,  1994.  On January  21,  1994,  Governor  Allen
submitted amendments to the budget with a financial impact totaling $89 million.
Major  amendments  proposed  by Governor  Allen  included  provisions  for a $30
million  reserve fund for the  anticipated  settlement of the Harper v. Virginia
Department of Taxation  court case  involving a dispute over taxation of federal
retirees.

         The  General  Assembly  amended  the  proposed  budget  and  passed the
resulting Budget Bill on March 12, 1994. The adopted Budget Bill did not include
the Governor's proposed reserve fund to settle the Harper case.

         On April 11,  1994,  Governor  Allen  submitted  38  amendments  to the
adopted  Budget  Bill for  consideration  by the General  Assembly.  Among other
things, the amendments  proposed to set aside a $40 million reserve fund for the
Harper case.  At the Veto Session held on April 20, 1994,  the General  Assembly
approved most of the amendments submitted by the Governor,  but did not agree to
the  reserve  fund for the  Harper  settlement.  However,  at a Special  Session
commended  on  July 6,  1994,  the  General  Assembly  took  action  to  enact a
settlement package and set aside a $60 million reserve fund to settle the Harper
case.

         The Budget  Bill  became  effective  as Chapter 966 of the 1994 Acts of
Assembly (the 1994-96 Appropriations Act) on July 1, 1994.

         At a Special Session concluded September 30, 1994, the General Assembly
passed, and sent to the Governor,  legislation that would in effect lengthen the
period certain  convicted  felons would be incarcerated  and would  incidentally
increase  the  capital and  operating  costs to the  Commonwealth  of its prison
system.  At its 1995 Regular  Session,  the General Assembly  authorized  $118.7
million in new prison-related capital projects to be funded with bonds issued by
the Virginia Public Building Authority.

         On December 19, 1994,  the Governor  presented to the General  Assembly
the 1995 Budget Bill, a bill proposing  amendments to the current  Appropriation
Act,  which  appropriated  funds  for the  1994-96  biennium.  The 1995  General
Assembly Session ended on February 25, 1995. The 1995 Budget Bill, as amended by
the General Assembly,  was submitted to the Governor for approval.  The Governor
then returned the 1995 Budget Bill with his  amendments to the General  Assembly
for consideration at its two-day reconvened session held on April 7-8, 1995. The
General  Assembly made final revisions to the Budget Bill and re-submitted it to
the Governor for his final  approval.  The Governor signed the 1995 Budget Bill,
as amended by the General Assembly, on May 5, 1995.

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<PAGE>

         The 1996-98 Budget Bill focuses on three key areas:  education,  public
safety,  and  economic  development.  The Budget Bill  provides  about  $1,411.9
million in spending  increases  above the level  necessary  to  continue  FY1996
workloads and costs.  Of these  increases,  $108.9 million would result from the
deposits to the Revenue  Stabilization  Fund.  The  remainder  would provide the
state share of Standards of Quality for public  schools,  proposed  increases in
higher  education,  increased  spending  for  adult  and  juvenile  corrections,
proposed  expansion of economic  development  activities in several  areas,  and
mandated  increases  in  several  entitlement   programs  in  health  and  human
resources, primarily for Medicaid.

         The  proposed   budget   includes  more  than  $200  million  to  cover
installment  payments on the  settlement  and the recent  ruling by the Virginia
Supreme  Court in favor of retirees who did not settle in the Harper v. Virginia
Department of Taxation.

         The Virginia  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and Virginia  Municipal
Bond Fund also invest in debt  obligations  issued by local  governments.  Local
government in the  Commonwealth is comprised of  approximately  95 counties,  41
incorporated  cities, and 190 incorporated  towns. The Commonwealth is unique in
that cities and  counties are  independent  and their land areas do not overlap.
Cities and counties  each levy and collect their own taxes and provide their own
services.  Towns,  which are units of local  government and which continue to be
part of the counties in which they are located,  levy and collect taxes for town
purposes but their  residents are also subject to county taxes.  Generally,  the
largest  expenditure  by local  governments  in the  Commonwealth  is for public
education.  Each  county  and city in the  Commonwealth,  with  few  exceptions,
constitutes a separate  school  district.  Counties,  cities and towns typically
also provide such  services  such as water and sewer  services,  police and fire
protection, and recreational facilities.

         In Davis v.  Michigan  (decided  March 28,  1989),  the  United  States
Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional states' exempting from state income tax the
retirement  benefits paid by the state or local  governments  without  exempting
retirement  benefits  paid by the  federal  government.  At that time,  Virginia
exempted  state  and  local  retirement  benefits  but  not  federal  retirement
benefits. At a Special Session held in April 1989, the General Assembly repealed
the exemption of state and local retirement benefits.  Following Davis, at least
five suits, some with multiple plaintiffs, for refunds of Virginia income taxes,
were filed by federal retirees.  These suits were consolidated under the name of
Harper v. Virginia Department of Taxation.

         In a Special  Session,  the Virginia  General  Assembly on July 9, 1994
passed  emergency  legislation  to  provide  payments  to  federal  retirees  in
settlement of the retirees' claims as a result of Davis. The settlement payments
are to be made over a five-year  period,  commencing  March 31, 1995.  The total
amount of authorized  appropriations for the settlement is $340 million (payment
to participating  retirees in installments of $60 million on March 31, 1995, and
$70  million on each  succeeding  March 31 through  March 31,  1999,  subject to
appropriation by the General Assembly).

         On  September  15, 1995 the  Supreme  Court of  Virginia  rendered  its
decision  in Harper.  The Court  reversed  the  judgment  of the trial court and
entered final  judgment in favor of the  taxpayers,  directing  that the amounts
unlawfully collected be refunded with statutory interest.

                                       43

<PAGE>

The  Commonwealth  will not seek an appeal or  rehearing of this  decision.  The
Commonwealth  issued  refund  checks on November 9, 1995,  and interest  stopped
accruing as of November 3, 1995. The cost of refunding all Virginia income taxes
paid on federal government  pensions for taxable years 1985, 1986, 1987 and 1988
to  federal   government   pensioners  who  opted  out  of  the  settlement  was
approximately  $78.4 million,  including  interest  earnings.  The total cost of
refunding  all  Virginia  income taxes paid on federal  government  pensions was
$418.4 million, $340 million for the settlement and $78.4 million as a result of
the judgment. Of this total amount, $60 million was paid in March 1995 and $78.4
million was paid in November 1995 leaving a balance to be paid of $280 million.

         NationsBank  believes that the information  summarized  above describes
some of the more  significant  matters  relating  to the  Virginia  Intermediate
Municipal  Bond Fund and  Virginia  Municipal  Bond  Fund.  The  sources  of the
information are the official  statements of issuers located in the Commonwealth,
other  publicly  available  documents,  and oral  statements  from various state
agencies.  NationsBank  has not  independently  verified any of the  information
contained in the official  statements,  other publicly available  documents,  or
oral statements from various state agencies.

Insured Municipal Securities

         Certain of the Municipal Securities held by the Funds may be insured at
the time of issuance as to the timely  payment of principal  and  interest.  The
insurance  policies  will  usually be  obtained  by the issuer of the  Municipal
Securities  at the time of its original  issuance.  In the event that the issuer
defaults  with  respect to interest or principal  payments,  the insurer will be
notified  and will be required  to make  payment to the  bondholders.  There is,
however,  no guarantee that the insurer will meet its obligations.  In addition,
such insurance will not protect against market fluctuations caused by changes in
interest rates and other factors.

Real Estate Investment Trusts

         A real estate  investment trust ("REIT") is a managed portfolio of real
estate  investments  which may include office  buildings,  apartment  complexes,
hotels and shopping malls. An Equity REIT holds equity positions in real estate,
and it seeks to provide  its  shareholders  with  income from the leasing of its
properties, and with capital gains from any sales of properties. A Mortgage REIT
specializes  in  lending  money to  developers  of  properties,  and  passes any
interest income it may earn to its shareholders.

         REITs  may be  affected  by  changes  in the  value  of the  underlying
property  owned or  financed  by the  REIT,  while  Mortgage  REITs  also may be
affected by the quality of credit  extended.  Both Equity and Mortgage REITs are
dependent upon management  skill and may not be  diversified.  REITs also may be
subject to heavy cash flow dependency, defaults by borrowers,  self-liquidation,
and the  possibility of failing to qualify for tax-free  pass-through  of income
under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

                                       44

<PAGE>

Guaranteed Investment Contracts

         Guaranteed  Investment  Contracts,   investment  contracts  or  funding
agreements  (each referred to as a "GIC") are investment  instruments  issued by
highly rated insurance  companies.  Pursuant to such contracts,  a Fund may make
cash  contributions  to a deposit  fund of the  insurance  company's  general or
separate  accounts.  The  insurance  company then  credits to a Fund  guaranteed
interest.  The insurance  company may assess periodic  charges against a GIC for
expense and service costs allocable to it, and the charges will be deducted from
the value of the  deposit  fund.  The  purchase  price paid for a GIC  generally
becomes part of the general assets of the issuer,  and the contract is paid from
the general assets of the issuer.

         A Fund  will only  purchase  GICs from  issuers  which,  at the time of
purchase,  meet  quality  and  credit  standards  established  by  the  Adviser.
Generally, GICs are not assignable or transferable without the permission of the
issuing  insurance  companies,  and an active  secondary market in GICs does not
currently exist. Also, a Fund may not receive the principal amount of a GIC from
the insurance  company on seven days' notice or less, at which point the GIC may
be considered to be an illiquid investment.

         A Money Market Fund will acquire GICs so that they, together with other
instruments in such Fund's portfolio which are not readily marketable,  will not
exceed applicable limitations on such Fund's investments in illiquid securities.
A Money Market Fund will restrict its investments in GICs to those having a term
of 397 days or less. In determining average weighted portfolio  maturity,  a GIC
will be deemed to have a maturity  equal to the period of time  remaining  under
the next readjustment of the guaranteed interest rate.

Variable- and Floating-Rate Instruments

         The Funds may purchase  variable-rate  and floating rate obligations as
described in the Prospectuses. If such instrument is not rated, the Adviser will
consider  the earning  power,  cash  flows,  and other  liquidity  ratios of the
issuers and guarantors of such  obligations and, if the obligation is subject to
a demand feature, will monitor their financial status to meet payment on demand.
In determining  average  weighted  portfolio  maturity,  a variable-rate  demand
instrument  issued  or  guaranteed  by  the  U.S.  Government  or an  agency  or
instrumentality  thereof  will be deemed to have a maturity  equal to the period
remaining  until  the   obligations   next  interest  rate   adjustment.   Other
variable-rate  obligations will be deemed to have a maturity equal to the longer
of the period  remaining to the next interest rate adjustment or the time a Fund
can recover payment of principal as specified in the instrument.

         Variable-rate  demand  notes  held  by a Money  Market  Fund  may  have
maturities  of more than 397 days,  provided (i) the Fund is entitled to payment
principal  on not more  than 30 days'  notice,  or at  specified  intervals  not
exceeding  397 days (upon not more than 30 days'  notice),  and (ii) the rate of
interest on such note is adjusted  automatically at periodic intervals which may
extend up to 397 days.

         The variable-  and-floating rate demand  instruments that the Funds may
purchase include participations in Municipal Securities purchased from and owned
by financial  institutions,

                                       45

<PAGE>

primarily  banks.  Participation  interests  provide  a Fund  with  a  specified
undivided  interest (up to 100%) in the  underlying  obligation and the right to
demand  payment of the unpaid  principal  balance plus  accrued  interest on the
participation  interest from the  institution  upon a specified  number of days'
notice,  not to  exceed 30 days.  Each  participation  interest  is backed by an
irrevocable  letter of  credit  or  guarantee  of a bank  that the  Adviser  has
determined  meets the  prescribed  quality  standards  for the  Funds.  The bank
typically  retains fees out of the interest paid on the obligation for servicing
the  obligation,  providing  the letter of credit,  and issuing  the  repurchase
commitment.

Stand-By Commitments

         The Funds may acquire "stand-by  commitments" with respect to Municipal
Securities  held in their  portfolios.  Under a "stand-by  commitment," a dealer
agrees  to  purchase  from a  Fund,  at a  Fund's  option,  specified  Municipal
Securities at a specified price.  Stand-by commitments are exercisable by a Fund
at any time before the maturity of the underlying Municipal Securities,  and may
be  sold,  transferred,   or  assigned  by  a  Fund  only  with  the  underlying
instruments.

         The  amount  payable  to a Tax-Free  Bond Fund upon its  exercise  of a
stand-by  commitment  will  normally be (i) the Fund's  acquisition  cost of the
Municipal Securities  (excluding any accrued interest which a Tax-Free Bond Fund
paid on  their  acquisition),  less any  amortized  market  premium  or plus any
amortized  market or original issue  discount  during the period a Tax-Free Bond
Fund owned the  securities,  plus (ii) all  interest  accrued on the  securities
since the last  interest  payment date during that period.  Under normal  market
conditions,  in  determining  net asset  value a Tax-Free  Bond Fund  values the
underlying  Municipal  Securities on an amortized cost basis.  Accordingly,  the
amount payable by a dealer upon exercise of a stand-by  commitment will normally
be  substantially  the same as the portfolio  value of the underlying  Municipal
Securities.

         A Fund's right to exercise  stand-by  commitments will be unconditional
and  unqualified.  A stand-by  commitment  will not be  transferable  by a Fund,
although  the Fund could sell the  underlying  Municipal  Securities  to a third
party at any time. Until a Fund exercises its stand-by  commitment,  it owns the
securities in its portfolio which are subject to the stand-by commitment.

         The Funds expect that stand-by  commitments will generally be available
without  the  payment  of any  direct or  indirect  consideration.  However,  if
necessary  or  advisable,  a Fund  may  pay  for a  stand-by  commitment  either
separately in cash or by paying a higher price for the security  being  acquired
which will be subject to the  commitment  (thus  reducing  the yield to maturity
otherwise  available for the same security).  When a Fund pays any consideration
directly or indirectly for a stand-by commitment,  its cost will be reflected as
unrealized  depreciation  for the period during which the  commitment is held by
that Fund. The Tax-Free Bond Funds will not acquire a stand-by commitment unless
immediately  after the  acquisition  not more than 5% of the Funds' total assets
will be subject to a demand feature, or in stand-by  commitments,  with the same
institution.

         Each Fund intends to enter into  stand-by  commitments  only with banks
and  broker/dealers  which,  in the Adviser's  opinion,  present  minimal credit
risks.  In  evaluating  the  credit  worthiness

                                       46

<PAGE>

of the issuer of a stand-by commitment, the Adviser will review periodically the
issuer's assets,  liabilities,  contingent  claims, and other relevant financial
information.

         The Funds  would  acquire  stand-by  commitments  solely to  facilitate
portfolio  liquidity and do not intend to exercise  their rights  thereunder for
trading purposes. Stand-by commitments acquired by a Fund will be valued at zero
in  determining  net asset  value.  A Fund's  reliance  upon the credit of these
dealers,  banks,  and  broker/dealers  will  be  secured  by  the  value  of the
underlying  Municipal  Securities that are subject to the commitment.  Thus, the
risk of loss to the Fund in connection with a "stand-by  commitment" will not be
qualitatively  different from the risk of loss faced by a person that is holding
securities  pending settlement after having agreed to sell the securities in the
ordinary course of business.

Variable- and Floating-Rate Government Securities

         Government securities that have variable- or floating interest rates or
demand or put features may be deemed to have remaining  maturities  shorter than
their nominal  maturities for purposes of determining a Fund's average  weighted
maturity.  The remaining  maturities of such  obligations  will be determined as
follows: (i) a government security with a variable- or floating rate of interest
will be deemed to have a maturity equal to the period  remaining  until the next
readjustment of the interest rate;  (ii) a government  security with a demand or
put feature  that  entitles  the holder to receive the  principal  amount of the
underlying  security at the time of or sometime after the holder gives notice of
demand or  exercise  of the put will be deemed to have a  maturity  equal to the
period remaining until the principal  amount can be recovered  through demand or
exercise of the put;  and (iii) a government  security  with both a variable- or
floating rate of interest as described in clause (i) and a demand or put feature
as  described  in clause  (ii) will be  deemed to have a  maturity  equal to the
shorter of the period remaining until the next readjustment of the interest rate
or the period  remaining  until the  principal  amount can be recovered  through
demand.

Lower Rated Debt Securities

         The yields on lower  rated  debt and  comparable  unrated  fixed-income
securities  generally  are higher  than the  yields  available  on  higher-rated
securities.  However,  investments  in lower rated debt and  comparable  unrated
securities  generally  involve  greater  volatility of price and risk of loss of
income and principal,  including the  probability of default by or bankruptcy of
the  issuers  of such  securities.  Lower  rated  debt  and  comparable  unrated
securities  (a) will likely have some  quality  and  protective  characteristics
that,  in the  judgment  of the rating  organization,  are  outweighed  by large
uncertainties  or  major  risk  exposures  to  adverse  conditions  and  (b) are
predominantly  speculative with respect to the issuer's capacity to pay interest
and repay principal in accordance with the terms of the obligation. Accordingly,
it is possible that these types of factors could, in certain  instances,  reduce
the value of securities held in a Fund's portfolio,  with a commensurate  effect
on the value of the Fund's shares.  Therefore,  an investment in the Fund should
not be considered as a complete  investment  program and may not be  appropriate
for all investors.

                                       47

<PAGE>

         The market prices of lower rated  securities  may  fluctuate  more than
higher  rated  securities  and may decline  significantly  in periods of general
economic difficulty which may follow periods of rising interest rates. During an
economic downturn or a prolonged period of rising interest rates, the ability of
issuers  of lower  quality  debt to  service  their  payment  obligations,  meet
projected goals, or obtain additional financing may be impaired.

         Since the risk of  default is higher for lower  rated  securities,  the
Adviser will try to minimize the risks inherent in investing in lower rated debt
securities  by engaging in credit  analysis,  diversification,  and attention to
current   developments  and  trends   affecting   interest  rates  and  economic
conditions.  The Adviser will attempt to identify those issuers of high-yielding
securities  whose  financial  condition is adequate to meet future  obligations,
have improved, or are expected to improve in the future.

         Unrated  securities  are not  necessarily  of lower  quality than rated
securities,  but  they  may not be  attractive  to as may  buyers.  Each  Fund's
policies  regarding  lower rated debt  securities is not  fundamental and may be
changed at any time without shareholder approval.

         While the  market  values of lower  rated debt and  comparable  unrated
securities  tend to react less to  fluctuations in interest rate levels than the
market  values of  higher-rated  securities,  the market values of certain lower
rated debt and comparable  unrated  securities also tend to be more sensitive to
individual  corporate  developments  and  changes in  economic  conditions  than
higher-rated securities. In addition, lower rated debt securities and comparable
unrated securities  generally present a higher degree of credit risk. Issuers of
lower rated debt and comparable  unrated  securities  often are highly leveraged
and may not have more traditional methods of financing available to them so that
their ability to service their debt obligations  during an economic  downturn or
during sustained  periods of rising interest rates may be impaired.  The risk of
loss due to default by such issuers is significantly greater because lower rated
debt and comparable  unrated  securities  generally are unsecured and frequently
are subordinated to the prior payment of senior  indebtedness.  A Fund may incur
additional  expenses to the extent that it is required to seek  recovery  upon a
default in the payment of principal or interest on its portfolio  holdings.  The
existence  of  limited  markets  for lower  rated  debt and  comparable  unrated
securities  may  diminish  a  Fund's  ability  to  (a)  obtain  accurate  market
quotations for purposes of valuing such securities and calculating its net asset
value  and (b) sell the  securities  at fair  value  either  to meet  redemption
requests or to respond to changes in the economy or in financial markets.

         Fixed-income  securities,  including  lower rated debt  securities  and
comparable  unrated  securities,  frequently have call or buy-back features that
permit their issuers to call or repurchase  the  securities  from their holders,
such as a Fund. If an issuer  exercises these rights during periods of declining
interest  rates,  a Fund may have to replace the security with a lower  yielding
security, thus resulting in a decreased return to a Fund.

         The  market  for  certain  lower  rated  debt  and  comparable  unrated
securities is relatively new and has not weathered a major  economic  recession.
The effect that such a recession might have on such securities is not known. Any
such recession,  however,  could disrupt severely the market for such securities
and adversely  affect the value of such securities.  Any such economic

                                       48

<PAGE>

downturn  also  could  adversely  affect  the  ability  of the  issuers  of such
securities to repay principal and pay interest thereon.

Dollar Roll Transactions

         Certain Funds may enter into "dollar roll" transactions,  which consist
of the sale by a Fund to a bank or broker/dealer  (the  "counterparty")  of GNMA
certificates or other  mortgage-backed  securities together with a commitment to
purchase  from the  counterparty  similar,  but not  identical,  securities at a
future date,  at the same price.  The  counterparty  receives all  principal and
interest payments,  including prepayments,  made on the security while it is the
holder.  A Fund  receives  a fee  from the  counterparty  as  consideration  for
entering  into the  commitment  to purchase.  Dollar rolls may be renewed over a
period of several months with a different repurchase price and a cash settlement
made at each renewal  without  physical  delivery of securities.  Moreover,  the
transaction may be preceded by a firm commitment agreement pursuant to which the
Fund agrees to buy a security on a future date.

         Dollar   roll   transactions   consist   of  the  sale  by  a  fund  of
mortgage-backed or other asset-backed securities,  together with a commitment to
purchase  similar,  but not identical,  securities at a future date, at the same
price. In addition,  a Fund is paid a fee as consideration for entering into the
commitment to purchase.  If the  broker/dealer to whom a Fund sells the security
becomes  insolvent,  the Fund's right to purchase or repurchase the security may
be restricted;  the value of the security may change  adversely over the term of
the dollar roll;  the security  that the Fund is required to  repurchase  may be
worth  less than the  security  that the Fund  originally  held,  and the return
earned by the Fund with the proceeds of a dollar roll may not exceed transaction
costs.

         The entry into dollar rolls involves  potential  risks of loss that are
different from those related to the securities underlying the transactions.  For
example,  if the counterparty  becomes  insolvent,  the Fund's right to purchase
from the  counterparty  might be  restricted.  Additionally,  the  value of such
securities  may  change  adversely  before  the Fund is able to  purchase  them.
Similarly,  the Fund may be required to purchase securities in connection with a
dollar  roll at a higher  price  than may  otherwise  be  available  on the open
market.  Since,  as noted  above,  the  counterparty  is  required  to deliver a
similar,  but not identical  security to the Fund, the security that the Fund is
required  to buy  under the  dollar  roll may be worth  less  than an  identical
security.  Finally,  there can be no  assurance  that the Fund's use of the cash
that it receives from a dollar roll will provide a return that exceeds borrowing
costs.

Foreign Currency Transactions

         Certain  of  the  Funds  may  enter  into  foreign  currency   exchange
transactions to convert foreign currencies to and from the United States Dollar.
A Fund either enters into these transactions on a spot (i.e., cash) basis at the
spot rate prevailing in the foreign currency  exchange  market,  or uses forward
contracts to purchase or sell foreign currencies.

         A forward foreign currency exchange contract is an obligation by a Fund
to purchase or sell a specific currency at a future date, which may be any fixed
number of days from the date of the contract.  Forward foreign currency exchange
contracts  establish an exchange  rate at a future

                                       49

<PAGE>

date.  These  contracts  are  transferable  in the  interbank  market  conducted
directly between  currency  traders  (usually large commercial  banks) and their
customers. A forward foreign currency exchange contract generally has no deposit
requirement, and is traded at a net price without commission. A Fund will direct
its custodian to segregate  high grade liquid assets in an amount at least equal
to its  obligations  under each  forward  foreign  currency  exchange  contract.
Neither  spot  transactions  nor forward  foreign  currency  exchange  contracts
eliminate  fluctuations  in the prices of a Fund's  portfolio  securities  or in
foreign exchange rates, or prevent loss if the prices of these securities should
decline.

         Certain  of the  Funds  also may  purchase  and write  options  on such
futures  contracts.  These  investments  will be  used  only  to  hedge  against
anticipated  future  changes in interest  rates  which  otherwise  might  either
adversely  affect the value of the  portfolio  securities of a Fund or adversely
affect the prices of  securities  which a Fund  intends to  purchase  at a later
date. Should interest rates move in an unexpected manner, a Fund may not achieve
the anticipated benefits of futures contracts or options on futures contracts or
may realize a loss.

         Foreign currency hedging  transactions are an attempt to protect a Fund
against  changes  in  foreign  currency  exchange  rates  between  the trade and
settlement  dates of  specific  securities  transactions  or  changes in foreign
currency  exchange rates that would adversely affect a portfolio  position or an
anticipated portfolio position. Although these transactions tend to minimize the
risk of loss due to a decline in the value of the hedged  currency,  at the same
time they tend to limit any  potential  gain that might be  realized  should the
value of the hedged  currency  increase.  The  precise  matching  of the forward
contract  amount and the value of the securities  involved will not generally be
possible because the future value of these securities in foreign currencies will
change as a  consequence  of market  movements in the value of those  securities
between the date the forward contract is entered into and date it matures.

Interest Rate Transactions

         Among the strategic  transactions into which the Non-Money Market Funds
may enter are  interest  rate swaps and the purchase or sale of related caps and
floors. Each Fund expects to enter into these transactions primarily to preserve
a return or spread on a particular  investment or portion of its  portfolio,  to
protect against currency fluctuations,  as a duration management technique or to
protect  against any increase in the price of  securities  the Funds  anticipate
purchasing  at a later  date.  Each Fund  intends to use these  transactions  as
hedges and not as speculative  investments  and will not sell interest rate caps
or floors where it does not own  securities or other  instruments  providing the
income stream the Fund may be obligated to pay.  Interest rate swaps involve the
exchange by the Fund with another party of their  respective  commitments to pay
or receive interest,  e.g., an exchange of floating rate payments for fixed-rate
payments with respect to a notional  amount of principal.  A currency swap is an
agreement to exchange cash flows on a notional  amount of two or more currencies
based on the  relative  value  differential  among  them and an index swap is an
agreement to swap cash flows on a notional amount based on changes in the values
of the  reference  indices.  The  purchase of a cap  entitles  the  purchaser to
receive  payments on a notional  principal  amount from the party  selling  such
floor to the extent that a specified index falls below a predetermined  interest
rate or amount.

                                       50

<PAGE>

         A Fund will  usually  enter into swaps on a net  basis,  i.e.,  the two
payment streams are netted out in a cash settlement on the payment date or dates
specified in the instrument,  with the Fund receiving or paying, as the case may
be, only the net amount of the two payments.  Inasmuch as these swaps, caps, and
floors are entered  into for good faith  hedging  purposes,  the Adviser and the
Funds believe such  obligations do not constitute  senior  securities  under the
1940 Act and, accordingly, will not treat them as being subject to its borrowing
restrictions.  The Funds will not enter into any swap, cap, or floor transaction
unless, at the time of entering into such transaction,  the unsecured  long-term
debt of the  counterparty,  combined with any credit  enhancements,  is rated at
least "A" by S&P or  Moody's  or has an  equivalent  rating  from an NRSRO or is
determined  to be of  equivalent  credit  quality by the Adviser.  If there is a
default by the counterparty,  the Fund may have contractual remedies pursuant to
the  agreements   related  to  the  transaction.   The  swap  market  has  grown
substantially  in recent  years  with a large  number  of banks  and  investment
banking firms acting both as  principals  and as agents  utilizing  standardized
swap  documentation.  As a result, the swap market has become relatively liquid.
Caps and floors are more recent innovations for which standardized documentation
has not yet been fully  developed  and,  accordingly,  they are less liquid than
swaps.

         With respect to swaps, a Fund will accrue the net amount of the excess,
if any, of its obligations over its entitlements  with respect to each swap on a
daily basis and will segregate an amount of cash or liquid high grade securities
having a value equal to the accrued excess.  Caps and floors require segregation
of assets with a value equal to a Fund's net obligation, if any.

Illiquid Securities

         Certain of the Non-Money Market Funds may invest up to 15% of their net
assets,  and certain of the Money Market Funds may invest up to 10% of their net
assets,  in securities that are considered  illiquid because of the absence of a
readily  available market or due to legal or contractual  restrictions.  Certain
restricted securities that are not registered for sale to the general public but
that can be resold to  institutional  investors may not be considered  illiquid,
provided that a dealer or institutional trading market exists.

Other Securities

         For additional information regarding options and futures, see "Schedule
B."  For  additional  information  regarding  mortgage-backed   securities,  see
"Schedule C."

Additional Investment Limitations

         In  addition to the  investment  limitations  disclosed  in the related
Prospectuses,  the Funds are subject to the investment limitations enumerated in
this subsection  which may be changed with respect to one of these Funds only by
a vote of the  holders  of a  majority  of such  Fund's  outstanding  shares (as
defined in this SAI).

         None of these Funds may:

      1.      Borrow money or issue senior securities as defined in the 1940 Act
              except that (a) a Fund may  borrow money from banks for temporary
              purposes in amounts up to one-

                                       51

<PAGE>

              third of the value of such Fund's total assets at the time of
              borrowing, provided that borrowings in excess of 5% of the value
              of such Fund's total assets will be repaid prior to the purchase
              of portfolio securities by such Fund, (b) a Fund may enter into
              commitments to purchase securities in accordance with the Fund's
              investment program, including delayed delivery and when-issued
              securities, which commitments may be considered the issuance of
              senior securities, and (c) a Fund may issue multiple classes of
              shares in accordance with SEC regulations or exemptions under the
              1940 Act.  The purchase or sale of futures contracts and related
              options shall not be considered to involve the borrowing of money
              or issuance of senior securities.

      2.      Purchase  any  securities  on margin  (except for such  short-term
              credits as are  necessary for the clearance of purchases and sales
              of portfolio  securities)  or sell any  securities  short  (except
              against the box). (For purposes of this  restriction,  the deposit
              or  payment  by the  Fund of  initial  or  maintenance  margin  in
              connection with futures  contracts and related options and options
              on securities  is not  considered to be the purchase of a security
              on margin.)

      3.      Underwrite  securities  issued by any other person,  except to the
              extent that the purchase of securities  and the later  disposition
              of such  securities  in  accordance  with  the  Fund's  investment
              program may be deemed an underwriting.  This restriction shall not
              limit a Fund's  ability  to invest in  securities  issued by other
              registered investment companies.

      4.      Invest in real estate or real estate limited partnership interests
              (the Fund may,  however,  purchase and sell securities  secured by
              real estate or interests therein or issued by issuers which invest
              in real estate or interests  therein).  This  restriction does not
              apply to real  estate  limited  partnerships  listed on a national
              stock exchange (e.g. the New York Stock Exchange).

      5.      Purchase or sell commodity contracts except that each Fund may, to
              the extent  appropriate  under its investment  policies,  purchase
              publicly  traded  securities of companies  engaging in whole or in
              part in such  activities,  may enter into  futures  contracts  and
              related  options,  may engage in  transactions on a when issued or
              forward  commitment  basis,  and may enter into  forward  currency
              contracts in accordance with its investment policies.

         In  addition,   certain  non-fundamental  investment  restrictions  are
applicable to various investment portfolios, including the following:

      1.      The Trust will not purchase or retain the securities of any issuer
              if the officers, directors or Trustees of the Trust, its advisers,
              or managers owning  beneficially more than one half of one percent
              of the securities of each issuer  together own  beneficially  more
              than five percent of such securities.

      2.      No  Fund of the  Trust  will  purchase  securities  of  unseasoned
              issuers, including their predecessors, that have been in operation
              for less than three years,  if by reason thereof

                                       52

<PAGE>

              the value of such Fund's  investment in such classes of securities
              would exceed 5% of such Fund's total  assets.  For purposes of the
              above-described    investment    limitation,    issuers    include
              predecessors,  sponsors,  controlling  persons,  general partners,
              guarantors and  originators  of underlying  assets which have less
              than three years of  continuous  operations  of relevant  business
              experience.

      3.      No Fund will  purchase  puts,  calls,  straddles,  spreads and any
              combination  thereof  if  by  reason  thereof  the  value  of  its
              aggregate  investment in such classes of securities will exceed 5%
              of its total assets except that:  (a) this  restriction  shall not
              apply to standby commitments, (b) this restriction shall not apply
              to a Fund's transactions in futures contracts and related options,
              and (c) a Fund may obtain  short-term  credit as may be  necessary
              for the clearance of purchases and sales of portfolio securities.

      4.      No Fund will  invest in  warrants,  valued at the lower of cost or
              market, in excess of 5% of the value of such Fund's assets, and no
              more than 2% of the value of the Fund's net assets may be invested
              in warrants that are not listed on the New York or American  Stock
              Exchange (for purposes of this undertaking, warrants acquired by a
              Fund in units or attached to securities  will be deemed to have no
              value).

      5.      Each of the  Government  Money  Market  Fund and the  Nations  Tax
              Exempt Fund may not purchase  securities  of any one issuer (other
              than obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government,  its
              agencies,   authorities   or   instrumentalities   and  repurchase
              agreements   fully   collateralized   by  such   obligations)  if,
              immediately after such purchase,  more than 5% of the value of the
              Fund's assets would be invested in the  securities of such issuer.
              Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  up to 25% of each  Fund's  total
              assets may be invested for a period of three  business days in the
              first tier securities of a single issuer without regard to such 5%
              limitation.

      6.      No Fund of the Trust will purchase securities of companies for the
              purpose of exercising control.

      7.      No Money Market Fund of the Trust will invest more than 10% of the
              value  of  its  net  assets  in  illiquid  securities,   including
              repurchase  agreements,  time deposits and GICs with maturities in
              excess of seven days,  illiquid restricted  securities,  and other
              securities which are not readily marketable.  For purposes of this
              restriction,  illiquid  securities  shall not  include  securities
              which  may be  resold  under  Rule  144A and  Section  4(2) of the
              Securities  Act  of  1933  that  the  Board  of  Trustees,  or its
              delegate,  determines to be liquid, based upon the trading markets
              for the specific security.

      8.      No Non-Money Market Fund of the Trust will invest more than 15% of
              the value of its net  assets  in  illiquid  securities,  including
              repurchase  agreements,  time deposits and GICs with maturities in
              excess of seven days,  illiquid restricted  securities,  and other
              securities which are not readily marketable.  For purposes of this
              restriction,  illiquid  securities  shall not  include  securities
              which may be resold  under  Rule 144A and  Section  4(2) under the
              Securities  Act  of  1933  that  the  Board  of  Trustees,  or its
              
                                       53

<PAGE>

              delegate,  determines to be liquid, based upon the trading markets
              for the specific security.

      9.      No Fund of the Trust  will  mortgage,  pledge or  hypothecate  any
              assets except to secure  permitted  borrowings and then only in an
              amount up to  one-third of the value of the Fund's total assets at
              the time of borrowing. For purposes of this limitation, collateral
              arrangements  with  respect  to the  writing of  options,  futures
              contracts,   options  on   futures   contracts,   and   collateral
              arrangements  with respect to initial and variation margin are not
              considered to be a mortgage, pledge or hypothecation of assets.

      10.     No Fund of the Trust will invest in securities of other investment
              companies,  except  as they may be  acquired  as part of a merger,
              consolidation  or  acquisition  of assets and except to the extent
              otherwise permitted by the 1940 Act.

      11.     No Fund of the Trust will purchase  oil, gas or mineral  leases or
              other  interests  (a Fund  may,  however,  purchase  and  sell the
              securities  of  companies  engaged  in  exploration,  development,
              production,  refining,  transporting  and marketing of oil, gas or
              minerals).

         In order to permit the sale of shares of the Trust in  certain  states,
the Trust may make commitments more restrictive than the investment policies and
limitations described above and in the Prospectuses.  Should the Trust determine
that any such  commitment is no longer in its best interest,  it will revoke the
commitment by terminating sales of its shares to investors residing in the state
involved.

                                 NET ASSET VALUE

Money Market Funds

         The Money  Market Funds use the  amortized  cost method of valuation to
value shares in such Funds. Pursuant to this method, a security is valued at its
cost  initially  and  thereafter  a constant  amortization  to  maturity  of any
discount or premium is assumed, regardless of the impact of fluctuating interest
rates on the market value of the security.  Where it is not appropriate to value
a security by the amortized  cost method,  the security will be valued either by
market quotations or by fair value as determined by the Board of Trustees.  This
method may result in periods  during which  value,  as  determined  by amortized
cost,  is higher or lower than the price the Trust would  receive if it sold the
security.

         Each of the Money Market Funds invest only in high quality  instruments
and maintain a  dollar-weighted  average portfolio  maturity  appropriate to its
objective of  maintaining  a stable net asset value per share,  provided  that a
Fund will neither  purchase any security deemed to have a remaining  maturity of
more  than  397  days  within  the  meaning  of the  1940  Act  nor  maintain  a
dollar-weighted  average  portfolio  maturity which exceeds 90 days. The Trust's
Board of Trustees has established  procedures  reasonably designed,  taking into
account  current  market  conditions  and each Money  Market  Fund's  investment
objective,  to stabilize the net asset value per share of each Money Market Fund
for purposes of sales and redemptions at $1.00.  These procedures include review
by the  Board  of  Trustees,  at such  intervals  as it  deems  appropriate,  to

                                       54

<PAGE>

determine  the  extent,  if any,  to which the net asset value per share of each
Money Market Fund calculated by using available market quotations  deviates from
$1.00 per share.  In the event such deviation  exceeds  one-half of one percent,
the Board of Trustees will  promptly  consider  what action,  if any,  should be
initiated.  If the Board of Trustees  believes  that the extent of any deviation
from a Fund's  $1.00  amortized  cost  price per share  may  result in  material
dilution or other unfair results to new or existing investors,  it has agreed to
take such steps as it  considers  appropriate  to  eliminate  or reduce,  to the
extent reasonably practicable,  any such dilution or unfair results. These steps
may include  selling  portfolio  instruments  prior to maturity;  shortening the
average portfolio maturity;  withholding or reducing dividends; redeeming shares
in kind;  reducing the number of a Fund's  outstanding  shares without  monetary
consideration;  or  utilizing  a net asset value per share  determined  by using
available market quotations.

Non-Money Market Funds

         With respect to the Equity Funds and Balanced  Fund, a security  listed
or traded on an exchange is valued at its last sales price on the exchange where
the security is principally  traded or,  lacking any sales on a particular  day,
the  security is valued at the mean  between the closing bid and asked prices on
that day. Each security traded in the over-the-counter market (but not including
securities  reported on the NASDAQ National Market System) is valued at the mean
between  the last bid and asked  prices  based upon quotes  furnished  by market
makers for such securities. Each security reported on the NASDAQ National Market
System is valued at the last sales price on the valuation  date. With respect to
the Bond Funds,  securities will be valued on the basis of prices provided by an
independent  pricing  service.  Prices  provided by the  pricing  service may be
determined  without  exclusive  reliance  on  quoted  prices,  and  may  reflect
appropriate  factors  such as yield,  type of issue,  coupon rate  maturity  and
seasoning  differential.  Securities  for which  prices are not  provided by the
pricing  service are valued at the mean  between  the last bid and asked  prices
based upon quotes furnished by market makers for such securities.

         With respect to each Non-Money Market Fund, securities for which market
quotations  are not readily  available are valued at fair value as determined in
good  faith by or under the  supervision  of the  Trust's  officers  in a manner
specifically authorized by the Board of Trustees.  Short-term obligations having
60 days or less to maturity are valued at  amortized  cost,  which  approximates
market value.

         Generally,  trading in foreign  securities,  as well as U.S. Government
securities, money market instruments and repurchase agreements, is substantially
completed  each day at  various  times  prior to the close of the New York Stock
Exchange (the  "Exchange").  The values of such securities used in computing the
net asset  value of the  shares of the Funds are  determined  as of such  times.
Foreign currency exchange rates are also generally determined prior to the close
of the Exchange. Occasionally, events affecting the value of such securities and
such exchange rates may occur between the times at which they are determined and
the close of the Exchange, which will not be reflected in the computation of net
asset value.  If during such periods  events occur which  materially  affect the
value of such  securities,  the  securities  will be valued at their fair market
value as determined in good faith by the Trustees.

                                       55

<PAGE>

         The Trust may redeem  shares  involuntarily  to reimburse the Funds for
any loss  sustained  by  reason of the  failure  of a  shareholder  to make full
payment for  Investor  Shares  purchased  by the  shareholder  or to collect any
charge relating to a transaction effected for the benefit of a shareholder which
is applicable to Investor  Shares as provided in the related  Prospectuses  from
time to time.  The  Trust  also may make  payment  for  redemptions  in  readily
marketable  securities or other  property if it is appropriate to do so in light
of Nations Fund Trust's responsibilities under the 1940 Act.

         Under the 1940 Act,  the Funds may suspend the right of  redemption  or
postpone the date of payment for Investor  Shares or Primary  Shares  during any
period when (a) trading on the Exchange is restricted  by  applicable  rules and
regulations  of the SEC;  (b) the  Exchange  is closed for other than  customary
weekend  and  holiday  closings;  (c)  the  SEC  has  by  order  permitted  such
suspension;  or (d) an emergency exists as determined by the SEC. (The Funds may
also  suspend or postpone the  recordation  of the transfer of their shares upon
the occurrence of any of the foregoing conditions.)

Exchange Privilege

         By use of the exchange privilege,  the holder of Investor Shares and/or
Primary  Shares  authorizes the transfer  agent or the  shareholder's  financial
institution  to rely on  telephonic  instructions  from any person  representing
himself to be the investor and reasonably  believed to be genuine.  The transfer
agent's or a financial  institution's  records of such instructions are binding.
Exchanges are taxable transactions for Federal income tax purposes; therefore, a
shareholder  will  realize a  capital  gain or loss  depending  on  whether  the
Investor Shares and/or Primary Shares being exchanged have a value which is more
or less than their adjusted cost basis.

         The  Funds and each of the other  funds of  Nations  Fund may limit the
number of times the exchange  privilege may be exercised by a shareholder within
a specified  period of time.  Also, the exchange  privilege may be terminated or
revised  at any  time by the  Trust  upon  such  notice  as may be  required  by
applicable regulatory agencies (presently sixty days for termination or material
revision),  provided that the exchange privilege may be terminated or materially
revised without notice under certain unusual circumstances.

         The current  prospectuses for the Investor Shares and Primary Shares of
each Fund  describes  the  exchange  privileges  available  to investors in such
Investor Shares and Primary Shares, respectively.

         Primary Shares of the Funds are offered and sold on a continuous  basis
by the  Distributor  acting as agent.  As  stated  in the  Prospectuses  for the
Primary  Shares,  Primary  Shares are sold to bank trust  departments  and other
financial  institutions   (primarily  to  NationsBank  and  its  affiliated  and
correspondent  banks)  (collectively,   "Institutions")   acting  on  behalf  of
customers   maintaining  a  qualified  trust  account  or  relationship  at  the
Institution.

                                       56

<PAGE>

                              DESCRIPTION OF SHARES

         Nations  Fund Trust is a  Massachusetts  business  trust.  The  Trust's
Declaration  of Trust  authorizes  the Board of Trustees  to issue an  unlimited
number of units of beneficial  interest ("shares") and to classify or reclassify
any unissued shares of the Trust into one or more  additional  classes or series
by setting or changing in any one or more respects their respective preferences,
conversion or other  rights,  voting  powers,  restrictions,  limitations  as to
dividends,  qualifications,  and terms and conditions of redemption. Pursuant to
such authority,  the Board of Trustees has authorized the issuance of thirty-two
series of shares,  of which thirty-one series are described in this Statement of
Additional  Information (each a "Fund").  Each Money Market Fund is divided into
six classes of shares:  Investor A Shares, Investor B Shares, Investor C Shares,
Daily Shares,  Primary A Shares and Primary B Shares. Each Non-Money Market Fund
generally is divided into five classes of shares:  Investor A Shares, Investor C
(formerly Investor B) Shares, Investor N (formerly Investor C) Shares, Primary A
Shares and Primary B Shares. However, the Equity Index Fund only issue Primary A
Shares, Primary B Shares and Investor A Shares.

         Shares have no preemptive  rights and only such  conversion or exchange
rights as the Board of  Trustees  may grant in its  discretion.  When issued for
payment as described in the Prospectuses,  the Trust's shares will be fully paid
and non-assessable. In the event of a liquidation or dissolution of the Trust or
an individual  Fund,  shareholders  of a Fund are entitled to receive the assets
available for distribution belonging to the particular Fund, and a proportionate
distribution,  based upon the relative  asset  values of the Trust's  respective
investment  portfolios,  of any general assets of the Trust not belonging to any
particular   investment   portfolio   which  are  available  for   distribution.
Shareholders  of a Fund are entitled to  participate,  in  proportion to the net
asset  value of the class or series of  shares  held,  in the net  distributable
assets of a  particular  Fund  involved in  liquidation,  based on the number of
shares of the Fund that are held by such shareholders.

         As stated in the  Prospectuses,  shareholders of each of the Funds will
vote in the aggregate and not by class or series,  except as otherwise expressly
required by law or when the Board of Trustees  determines  that the matter to be
voted upon  affects only the  interests of the holders of a particular  class or
series of shares. In addition,  shareholders of each investment portfolio of the
Trust  will vote in the  aggregate  and not by  portfolio,  except as  otherwise
expressly  required  by law or when the Board of  Trustees  determines  that the
matter  to be  voted  upon  affects  only the  interests  of  shareholders  of a
particular  portfolio.  Rule 18f-2 (the "Rule") under the 1940 Act provides that
any matter  required to be  submitted to the holders of the  outstanding  voting
securities  of an  investment  company  such as the Trust shall not be deemed to
have been effectively acted upon unless approved by the holders of a majority of
the outstanding  shares of each investment  portfolio affected by the matter. An
investment  portfolio  is  affected  by a matter  unless  it is  clear  that the
interests of each investment portfolio in the matter are substantially identical
or that the matter  does not affect any  interest of the  investment  portfolio.
Under the Rule, the approval of an investment  advisory  agreement or any change
in a fundamental  investment policy would be effectively acted upon with respect
to an  investment  portfolio  only if approved by a majority of the  outstanding
shares of such investment  portfolio.  However,  the Rule also provides that the
ratification of the appointment of independent public accountants,  the approval
of  principal  underwriting  contracts,  and the  election  of  Trustees  may be
effectively  acted

                                       57

<PAGE>

upon by  shareholders  of the Trust  voting  together in the  aggregate  without
regard to a particular  investment  portfolio.  Under the Trust's Declaration of
Trust,  when the Board of  Trustees  determines  that a matter to be voted  upon
affects only the  interests of the  shareholders  of one or more but not all the
Funds,  only the  shareholders of the Fund or Funds so affected will be entitled
to vote on the matter.

         The Trust's  Declaration  of Trust  authorizes  the Board of  Trustees,
without  shareholder  approval (unless otherwise required by applicable law), to
(a) sell and  convey  the  assets  of a Fund to  another  management  investment
company for consideration  which may include  securities issued by the purchaser
and,  in  connection  therewith,  to cause  all  outstanding  shares of the Fund
involved  to be  redeemed at a price which is equal to their net asset value and
which  may be paid  in  cash  or by  distribution  of the  securities  or  other
consideration  received  from the sale and  conveyance;  (b) sell and  convert a
Fund's assets into money and, in connection therewith,  to cause all outstanding
shares of the Fund  involved  to be redeemed  at their net asset  value;  or (c)
combine  the assets  belonging  to a Fund with the assets  belonging  to another
investment  portfolio  of  the  Trust,  if  the  Board  of  Trustees  reasonably
determines  that such  combination  will not have a material  adverse  effect on
shareholders of any investment portfolio participating in such combination, and,
in connection therewith,  to cause all outstanding shares of any such Fund to be
redeemed at their net asset value or converted  into shares of another  class or
series of the Trust's  shares at net asset  value.  In the event that shares are
redeemed in cash at their net asset value, a shareholder  may receive in payment
for such shares an amount that is more or less than his original  investment due
to changes in the market prices of the Fund's portfolio securities. The exercise
of such  authority by the Board of Trustees will be subject to the provisions of
the 1940 Act.

Dividends and Distributions

         Money Market Funds.  Net income for dividend  purposes  consists of (i)
interest  accrued and original issue discount earned on the Fund's assets,  (ii)
plus the  amortization  of market  discount  (including,  in the case of the Tax
Exempt Fund, market discount on tax-exempt obligations purchased after April 30,
1993) and minus the  amortization  of market premium on such assets,  (iii) less
accrued expenses  directly  attributable to the Fund and the general expenses of
Nations Fund prorated to a Fund on the basis of its relative net assets.  Shares
of the Money Market Funds begin earning  dividends on the day the purchase order
is executed and continue earning  dividends through and including the day before
the redemption order is executed (e.g., the settlement date).

         Non-Money Market Funds. With respect to the Non-Money Market Funds, net
investment  income for dividend  purposes  consist of items (i),  (ii) and (iii)
discussed  above  with  respect  to the  Money  Market  Funds  and  dividend  or
distribution income on such assets.

         Shares of the Bond Funds are eligible to begin earning  dividends  that
are  declared  on the day the  purchase  order is  executed  and  continue to be
eligible for dividends through and including the day before the redemption order
is executed.  Shares of the Equity  Funds and the Balanced  Fund are eligible to
receive dividends when declared,  provided however,  that the purchase order for
such shares is received at least one day prior to the dividend  declaration  and
such shares

                                       58

<PAGE>

continue to be eligible for  dividends  through and including the day before the
redemption order is executed.


                     ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONCERNING TAXES

         The  following   summarizes   certain   additional  tax  considerations
generally  affecting the Funds and their  shareholders that are not described in
the  Prospectuses.  No attempt is made to present a detailed  explanation of the
tax treatment of the Trust or its  shareholders or possible  changes to the law,
and the discussion here and in the  Prospectuses is not intended as a substitute
for careful tax planning.  Potential investors should consult their tax advisors
with specific reference to their own tax situation.

         The Trust  has  received  a private  letter  ruling  from the  Internal
Revenue Service to the effect that: (i) the differing fees imposed on Primary A,
Primary B, Investor A, Investor B, Investor C (formerly Investor B) and Investor
N (formerly  Investor C Shares)  Shares with respect to servicing,  distribution
and  administrative  support  services,  and transfer agency  arrangements;  the
differing  sales charges on purchases and  redemptions  of such shares;  and the
conversion  feature of Investor C Shares of the Non-Money  Market Funds does not
result in the Trust's  dividends  or  distributions  constituting  "preferential
dividends" under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code").

Federal Taxes - In General

         Each Fund of the Trust will be treated as a separate  corporate  entity
under the Code and intends to qualify as a regulated  investment  company.  As a
regulated investment company,  each Fund is not subject to federal income tax on
the portion of its net investment income (i.e., taxable interest,  dividends and
other  taxable  ordinary  income,  net of expenses)  and capital gain net income
(i.e.,  the excess of capital gains over capital  losses) that it distributes to
shareholders,  provided  that it  distributes  at  least  90% of its  investment
company  taxable income (i.e.,  net investment  income and the excess of its net
short-term  capital gains over net long-term capital losses) and at least 90% of
its tax-exempt income (net of expenses  allocable  thereto) for the taxable year
(the  "Distribution  Requirement"),  and satisfies certain other requirements of
the Code some of which are described below.  Distributions by a Fund made during
the taxable year or, under specified  circumstances,  within twelve months after
the close of the taxable year,  will be considered  distributions  of income and
gains  of  the  taxable  year  and  can  therefore   satisfy  the   Distribution
Requirement.

         In addition to satisfying  the  Distribution  Requirement;  a regulated
investment  company  must (i)  derive  at least  90% of its  gross  income  from
dividends,  interest,  certain payments with respect to securities loans,  gains
from the sale or other disposition of stock or securities or foreign  currencies
(to the  extent  such  currency  gains are  directly  related  to the  regulated
investment company's principal business of investing in stock or securities) and
other  income  (including  but not  limited  to gains from  options,  futures or
forward  contracts)  derived  with  respect to its business of investing in such
stock, securities or currencies (the "Income Requirement"); and (ii) derive less
than 30% of its gross income  (exclusive of certain gains on designated  hedging
transactions  that are offset by realized  or  unrealized  losses on  offsetting
positions)  from the sale

                                       59

<PAGE>

or other  disposition  of stock,  securities or foreign  currencies (or options,
futures  or  forward  contracts   thereon)  held  for  less  than  three  months
("Short-Short Gains").  However, foreign currency gains, including those derived
from options,  futures and forwards,  will not be  characterized  as Short-Short
Gain  if  they  are  directly  related  to the  regulated  investment  company's
principal  business of investing in stock or  securities  (or options or futures
thereon).  Because of the  limitations on Short-Short  Gains, a Fund may have to
limit the sale of  appreciated  securities  that it has held for less than three
months.  However,  these  limitations  will not prevent a Fund from disposing of
specific  investments  at a loss,  since the  recognition  of a loss  before the
expiration of the  three-month  holding  period is  disregarded  for purposes of
Short-Short Gains.  Interest  (including  original issue discount) received by a
Fund at maturity or upon the  disposition of a security held for less than three
months  will not be  treated  as  gross  income  derived  from the sale or other
disposition of such security for purposes of Short-Short Gains. However,  income
that is attributable to realized  market  appreciation  will be treated as gross
income from the sale or other disposition of securities for this purpose.

         In general,  gain or loss recognized by a Fund on the disposition of an
asset  will  be a  capital  gain  or  loss.  However,  gain  recognized  on  the
disposition of a debt obligation  (including  tax-exempt  obligations  purchased
after April 30, 1993) purchased by a Fund at a market discount (generally,  at a
price less than its principal  amount) will be treated as ordinary income to the
extent of the portion of the market  discount which accrued during the period of
time the Fund held the debt obligation.  In addition, under the rules of Section
988 of the Code, gain or loss recognized on the disposition of a debt obligation
denominated in a foreign currency or an option with respect thereto (but only to
the extent attributable to changes in foreign currency exchange rates), and gain
or loss recognized on the disposition of a foreign  currency  forward  contract,
futures contract, option or similar financial instrument, or of foreign currency
itself, will generally be treated as ordinary income or loss.

         In general,  for purposes of determining  whether  capital gain or loss
recognized by a Fund on the  disposition of an asset is long-term or short-term,
the  holding  period of the asset  may be  affected  if (i) the asset is used to
close a "short sale" (which  includes for certain  purposes the acquisition of a
put option) or is  substantially  identical to another  asset so used,  (ii) the
asset  is  otherwise  held  by the  Fund as part  of a  "straddle"  (which  term
generally  excludes a  situation  where the asset is stock and the Fund grants a
qualified  covered  call  option  (which,   among  other  things,  must  not  be
deep-in-the-money)  with  respect  thereto)  or (iii) the asset is stock and the
Fund grants an in-the-money  qualified covered call option with respect thereto.
However,  for purposes of  Short-Short  Gains,  the holding  period of the asset
disposed of may be reduced only in the case of clause (i) above. In addition,  a
Fund may be required to defer the  recognition of loss on the  disposition of an
asset  held  as  part  of a  straddle  may  be  deferred  to the  extent  of any
unrecognized gain on the offsetting position.

         Any gain  recognized  by a Fund on the  lapse  of,  or any gain or loss
recognized  by a Fund  from a closing  transaction  with  respect  to, an option
written by the Fund will be treated as a short-term  capital  gain or loss.  For
purposes of the Short-Short  Gains, the holding period of an option written by a
Fund will  commence  on the date it is written  and end on the date it lapses or
the date a closing  transaction  is  entered  into.  Accordingly,  a Fund may be
limited in its ability to

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<PAGE>

write  options  which  expire  within  three  months and to enter  into  closing
transactions at a gain within three months of the writing of options.

         In addition to satisfying the requirement  described  above,  each Fund
must  satisfy an asset  diversification  test in order to qualify as a regulated
investment company. Under this test, at the close of each quarter of each Fund's
taxable  year,  at least 50% of the value of the Fund's  assets must  consist of
cash and cash items, U.S. Government  securities,  securities of other regulated
investment companies,  and securities of other issuers (as to which the Fund has
not invested  more than 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets in securities
of such  issuer  and as to which  the Fund  does not hold  more  than 10% of the
outstanding voting securities of such issuer), and no more than 25% of the value
of its total assets may be invested in the  securities  of any one issuer (other
than U.S.  Government  securities and securities of other  regulated  investment
companies),  or in two or more  issuers  which the Fund  controls  and which are
engaged  in the same or  similar  trades  or  businesses  or  related  trades or
businesses.

         If for any  taxable  year a Fund  does  not  qualify  for  Federal  tax
treatment  as  a  regulated  investment  company,  all  of  its  taxable  income
(including  its net  capital  gain) will be  subject  to  Federal  income tax at
regular   corporate  rates  without  any  deduction  for  distributions  to  its
shareholders.  In such event, dividend distributions  (including amounts derived
from interest on Municipal  Securities in the case of the Municipal Income Fund,
Short-Term  Municipal Income Fund,  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund, the State
Intermediate  Municipal Bond Funds and the State  Municipal Bond Funds) would be
taxable  as  ordinary  income to the  Fund's  shareholders  to the extent of the
Fund's current and accumulated earnings and profits.

         The  Funds  also are  available  for a  variety  of  retirement  plans,
including IRAs, that allow investors to shelter some of their income from taxes.
A Tax Free Bond  Fund,  however,  is  generally  not a suitable  investment  for
retirement  plans because such retirement  plans would not gain any benefit from
the  tax-exempt  nature  of the Tax Free  Bond  Fund's  dividends  because  such
dividends would be ultimately  taxable to the beneficiaries  when distributed to
them.  Investors  should  contact  their Selling  Agents for details  concerning
retirement plans.

         The  Funds  also are  available  for a  variety  of  retirement  plans,
including IRAs, that allow investors to shelter some of their income from taxes.
A Tax Free Bond,  however, is generally not a suitable investment for retirement
plans  because  such  retirement  plans  would  not  gain any  benefit  from the
tax-exempt  nature of the Tax Free Fund's dividends because such dividends would
be ultimately taxable to the beneficiaries  when distributed to them.  Investors
should contact their Selling Agents for details concerning retirement plans.

         Depending  upon  the  extent  of a  Fund's  activities  in  states  and
localities  in which  its  offices  are  maintained,  in  which  its  agents  or
independent  contractors are located,  or in which it is otherwise  deemed to be
conducting business,  such Fund may be subject to the tax laws of such states or
localities.  In addition,  in those states and localities  which have income tax
laws,  the treatment of a Fund and its  shareholders  under such laws may differ
from their treatment under Federal income tax laws.

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<PAGE>

Excise Tax on Regulated Investment Companies

         A nondeductible  4% excise tax will be imposed on each Fund (other than
to the  extent of the Fund's  tax-exempt  income) to the extent it does not meet
certain minimum distribution requirements by the end of each calendar year. Each
Fund will either  actually or be deemed to distribute  substantially  all of its
net  investment  income and net capital  gains by the end of each  calendar year
and, thus, expects not to be subject to the excise tax.

         For purposes of the corporate  alternative  minimum tax (the "AMT") and
the  "environmental  tax",  the corporate  dividends  received  deduction is not
itself an item of tax preference that must be added back to taxable income or is
otherwise disallowed in determining a corporation's  alternative minimum taxable
income ("AMTI").  However,  corporate shareholders will generally be required to
take the full amount of any dividend  received  from the Equity Income Fund into
account  (without a  dividends-received  deduction) in determining  its adjusted
current earnings.

         Distributions  by  a  Fund  that  do  not  constitute  ordinary  income
dividends,  exempt-interest  dividends or capital gain dividends will be treated
as a return of capital to the extent of (and in reduction of) the  shareholder's
tax basis in his/her shares; any excess will be treated as gain from the sale of
his/her shares, as discussed below.

         Prior to purchasing  shares in one of the Non-Money  Market Funds,  the
impact of  dividends  or  distributions  which are  expected to be or have been,
declared,  but not  paid,  should  be  carefully  considered.  Any  dividend  or
distribution  declared  shortly  after a purchase  of such  shares  prior to the
record  date will have the effect of  reducing  the per share net asset value by
the per share amount of the dividend or  distribution.  All or a portion of such
dividend or distribution, although in effect a return of capital, may be subject
to tax.

         Distributions  by a Fund will be treated in the manner  described above
regardless  of whether  such  distributions  are paid in cash or  reinvested  in
additional  shares of the Fund (or of another  Fund).  Shareholders  receiving a
distribution  in the form of  additional  shares will be treated as  receiving a
distribution in an amount equal to the fair market value of the shares received,
determined as of the reinvestment  date. In addition,  if the net asset value at
the time a shareholder  purchases  shares of a Fund reflects  undistributed  net
investment  income  or  recognized   capital  gain  net  income,  or  unrealized
appreciation  in the  value of the  assets of the  Fund,  distributions  of such
amounts will be taxable to the shareholder in the manner described  above,  even
though such  distributions  economically  constitute  a return of capital to the
shareholder.

Sale or Redemption of Shares

         A shareholder  will recognize gain or loss on the sale or redemption of
shares of a Fund in an amount  equal to the  difference  between the proceeds of
the sale or redemption and the  shareholder's  adjusted tax basis in the shares.
All or a portion of any loss so recognized may be disallowed if the  shareholder
purchases other shares of the Fund (or substantially identical shares) within 30
days  before  or after  the sale or  redemption.  In  general,  any gain or loss
arising from (or treated as arising  from) the sale or redemption of shares of a
Fund will be considered  capital in

                                       62

<PAGE>

nature and will be  long-term  capital  gain or loss if the shares were held for
longer  than one  year.  However,  any  capital  loss  arising  from the sale or
redemption  of shares  held for six  months or less  will be  disallowed  to the
extent of the amount of  exempt-interest  dividends  received on such shares and
(to the extent not  disallowed)  will be treated as a long-term  capital loss to
the extent of the amount of capital  gain  dividends  received  on such  shares.
Capital losses in any year are deductible only to the extent capital gains plus,
in the case of a taxpayer  filing an individual  tax return,  $3,000 of ordinary
income.  None of the Money  Market  Funds  expect to realize  long-term  capital
gains, and therefore, do not foresee payment of any capital gain.

         If a shareholder (i) incurs a sales load in acquiring shares of a Fund,
(ii) disposes of such shares less than 91 days after they are acquired and (iii)
subsequently acquires shares of the Fund or another fund at a reduced sales load
pursuant  to a right  to  reinvest  at  such  reduced  sales  load  acquired  in
connection  with the  acquisition of the shares disposed of, then the sales load
on the shares  disposed of (to the extent of the  reduction in the sales load on
the shares subsequently acquired) shall not be taken into account in determining
gain or loss on the shares  disposed of, but shall be treated as incurred on the
acquisition of the shares subsequently acquired.

Investment Strategy

         Investing the same dollar amount at regular  intervals is an investment
strategy known as Dollar Cost Averaging. Using this strategy, investors purchase
a greater  number of shares when the fund's  price is low and fewer  shares when
the price is high. As a result,  the average  purchase  price for shares will be
less than their average cost.  Dollar Cost Averaging does not provide  assurance
of  making a profit  or any  guarantee  against  loss in  continually  declining
markets.  Investors  should  evaluate  whether  they  are  able to make  regular
investments  through  periods of declining  price levels before  deciding to use
this investment technique.

Tax Rates

         As of the  printing  of this  SAI,  the  maximum  individual  tax  rate
applicable to ordinary  income is 39.6%  (marginal  rates may be higher for some
individuals due to phase out of exemptions and  elimination of deductions);  the
maximum  individual  tax rate  applicable  to net capital  gains is 28%; and the
maximum  corporate tax rate  applicable to ordinary income and net capital gains
is 35% (however, to eliminate the benefit of lower marginal corporate income tax
rates,  corporations  which  have  taxable  income in excess of  $100,000  for a
taxable year will be required to pay an additional amount of income tax of up to
$11,750 and corporations  which have taxable income in excess of $15,000,000 for
a taxable  year will be  required  to pay an  additional  amount of tax of up to
$100,000).

Foreign Shareholders

         Taxation  of  a  shareholder  who,  as  to  the  United  States,  is  a
nonresident alien individual,  foreign trust or estate, foreign corporation,  or
foreign partnership ("foreign shareholder"),  depends on whether the income from
a Fund is "effectively  connected"  with a U.S. trade or business  carried on by
such shareholder.

                                       63

<PAGE>

         If the  income  from a Fund is not  effectively  connected  with a U.S.
trade or business carried on by a foreign shareholder, ordinary income dividends
will be subject to U.S.  withholding tax at the rate of 30% (or lower applicable
treaty rate) upon the gross amount of the dividend.  Furthermore, such a foreign
shareholder may be subject to U.S.  withholding tax at the rate of 30% (or lower
applicable  treaty rate) on the gross income  resulting from the Fund's election
to treat any foreign  taxes paid by its  shareholders,  but may not be allowed a
deduction  against this gross income or a credit  against this U.S.  withholding
tax for the foreign  shareholder's pro rata share of such foreign taxes which it
is treated as having paid. Such a foreign  shareholder would generally be exempt
from U.S.  federal income tax on gains realized on the sale of shares of a Fund,
capital gain dividends and  exempt-interest  dividends and amounts retained by a
Fund that are designated as undistributed capital gains.

         If the income from a Fund is effectively connected with a U.S. trade or
business carried on by a foreign  shareholder,  then ordinary income  dividends,
capital gain  dividends  and any gains  realized  upon the sale of shares of the
Fund will be subject to U.S.  federal income tax at the rates applicable to U.S.
citizens, U.S. residents or domestic corporations.

         In the  case  of  foreign  noncorporate  shareholders,  a  Fund  may be
required to withhold U.S.  federal income tax at a rate of 31% on  distributions
that are otherwise  exempt from  withholding tax (or taxable at a reduced treaty
rate)  unless such  shareholders  furnish the Fund with proper  notification  of
their foreign status.

         The tax  consequences  to a foreign  shareholder  entitled to claim the
benefits  of an  applicable  tax treaty may be  different  from those  described
herein.  Foreign  shareholders  are urged to consult their own tax advisors with
respect to the particular tax  consequences  to them of an investment in a Fund,
including the applicability of foreign taxes.

Special Tax  Considerations  Pertaining to the Value Fund,  Capital Growth Fund,
Emerging Growth Fund, Equity Index Fund,  Disciplined Equity Fund, Managed Index
Fund,  Balanced  Assets Fund,  Short-Intermediate  Government  Fund,  Short-Term
Income Fund, Diversified Income Fund and Strategic Fixed Income Fund

         With respect to the Value Fund, Capital Growth Fund, Emerging Growth 
Fund, Equity Index Fund, Disciplined Equity Fund, Managed Index Fund, Managed 
Small Cap Index Fund Balanced Assets Fund, Short-Intermediate Government Fund, 
Short-Term Income Fund,  Diversified Income Fund and Strategic Fixed Income Fund
some  investments may be subject to special rules which  govern the Federal  
income tax  treatment  of certain  transactions denominated in terms of a 
currency  other than the U.S.  dollar or determined by reference to the value 
of one or more currencies other than the U.S. dollar. The types of  transactions
covered by the special rules include the following: (1) the acquisition of, or 
becoming  the  obligor  under,  a bond or other  debt instrument (including, to 
the extent provided in Treasury regulations, preferred stock); (2) the accruing 
of certain trade receivables and payables;  and (3) the entering into or 
acquisition of any forward contract,  futures contract, option, and similar 
financial  instrument.  The disposition of a currency other than the U.S. 
dollar by a U.S.  taxpayer is also treated as a transaction  subject to the
special  currency  rules.  With respect to  transactions  covered by the special
rules,  foreign currency gain or loss is calculated  separately from any gain or
loss on the underlying  transaction and is normally  taxable as ordinary gain or

                                       64

<PAGE>

loss. The amount of any realized gain or loss on closing out a forward  contract
will generally result in a realized capital gain or loss for tax purposes.

         Transactions  that may be  engaged  in by the  Funds  (such as  futures
contracts and options on stock indices and futures contracts) will be subject to
a special tax treatment as "Section 1256 contracts."  Section 1256 contracts are
treated as if they are sold for their fair market value on the last business day
of the taxable year, regardless of whether a taxpayer's  obligations (or rights)
under such contracts have  terminated  (by delivery,  exercise,  entering into a
closing transaction or otherwise) as of such date. Any gain or loss arising from
the actual or deemed  disposition  of a Section 1256  contract is treated as 60%
long-term  capital gain or loss and 40%  short-term  capital  gain or loss.  The
Internal  Revenue Service has held in several private rulings that gains arising
from  Section 1256  contracts  will not be treated as  Short-Short  Gains if the
gains arise from a deemed disposition. A Fund may elect not to have this special
tax treatment apply to Section 1256 contracts that are part of "mixed straddles"
with other investments of the Fund that are not Section 1256 contracts.

         In the case of an  overlap  between  Sections  1256  and  988,  special
provisions  determine the character and timing of any income,  gain or loss. The
Funds will attempt to monitor  Section 988  transactions to avoid an adverse tax
impact.

         Investment  returns  received by the Fund may give rise to  withholding
and other taxes  imposed by foreign  countries,  generally  at rates from 10% to
40%.  Tax  conventions  between  certain  countries  and the U.S.  may reduce or
eliminate such taxes. Foreign countries generally do not impose taxes on capital
gains with respect to investments by nonresident investors. To the extent a Fund
does  pay  foreign  withholding  or  other  foreign  taxes  on  certain  of  its
investments,  investors  will be unable  to take a  deduction  or  receive a tax
credit with respect to such foreign taxes in computing their U.S. tax liability,
since investment by the Funds in foreign investments is limited.

Special Tax Considerations Pertaining to the Municipal Income Fund, Short-Term
Municipal Income Fund, Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund, the State Intermediate
Municipal Bond Funds and the State Municipal Bond Funds

         As described above and in the Prospectuses, the Tax-Free Bond Funds are
designed to provide investors with current tax-exempt interest income. Each Fund
is not intended to constitute a balanced  investment program and is not designed
for  investors  seeking  capital   appreciation  or  maximum  tax-exempt  income
irrespective  of  fluctuations  in  principal.  Shares  of a Fund  would  not be
suitable for  tax-exempt  institutions  and may not be suitable  for  retirement
plans  qualified  under Section 401 of the Code,  H.R. 10 plans,  and individual
retirement accounts since such plans and accounts are generally  tax-exempt and,
therefore, would not gain any additional benefit from the Fund's dividends being
tax-exempt.

         The  Municipal   Income  Fund,   Short-Term   Municipal   Income  Fund,
Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund, the State  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Funds
and the State Municipal Bond Funds are designed to provide investors with a high
level  of  income   exempt  from  Federal  and,  with  respect  to  the  Florida
Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund and  Florida  Municipal  Bond  Fund,

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<PAGE>

Georgia  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund and  Georgia  Municipal  Bond  Fund,
Maryland  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund and Maryland  Municipal  Bond Fund,
North Carolina  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund and North Carolina  Municipal
Bond Fund,  South Carolina  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and South Carolina
Municipal Bond Fund,  Tennessee  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and Tennessee
Municipal Bond Fund, and Virginia Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and Virginia
Municipal Bond Fund,  Florida state intangibles tax, and the Georgia,  Maryland,
North Carolina,  South Carolina, or Virginia state income tax, and the Tennessee
Hall  Income Tax on  unearned  income,  respectively.  Florida  and Texas do not
presently  impose  any  income  tax  but  Florida   currently  imposes  a  state
intangibles tax on intangible personal property.  Exempt-interest  dividends may
be treated by the shareholders as items of interest  excludable from their gross
income under  Section  103(a) of the Code.  An  exempt-interest  dividend is any
dividend or part thereof  paid by a Fund and  designated  as an  exempt-interest
dividend in a written  notice mailed to  shareholders  not later than sixty days
after the close of the Funds'  taxable year.  However,  the aggregate  amount of
dividends  so  designated  by a Fund  cannot  exceed the excess of the amount of
interest exempt from tax under Section 103 of the Code received by a Fund during
the taxable year over any amounts  disallowed as deductions  under  Sections 265
and 171(a)(2) of the Code.  The  percentage of the total  dividends paid for any
taxable year which qualifies as  exempt-interest  dividends will be the same for
all  shareholders  receiving  dividends  from the same Fund with respect to such
year,  regardless  of the period for which the shares were held.  In order for a
Fund to pay exempt-interest dividends for any taxable year, at the close of each
quarter of its taxable  year at least 50% of the  aggregate  value of the Fund's
assets must consist of exempt-interest obligations.

         Shareholders  are advised to consult their tax advisers with respect to
whether  exempt-interest  dividends  would retain the  exclusion  under  Section
103(a) if the shareholder would be treated as a "substantial user" or a "related
person" to such user with  respect to  facilities  financed  through  any of the
tax-exempt  obligations  held by a Fund. A  "substantial  user" is defined under
U.S.  Treasury  Regulations to include a non-exempt  person who regularly uses a
part of such  facilities  in his  trade or  business  and whose  gross  revenues
derived  with  respect to the  facilities  financed by the issuance of bonds are
more than 5% of the total revenues derived by all users of such  facilities,  or
who occupies more than 5% of the usable area of such facilities or for whom such
facilities or a part thereof were specifically  constructed,  reconstructed,  or
acquired.   A  "related   person"  includes  certain  related  natural  persons,
affiliated corporations, partners and partnerships, and S corporations and their
shareholders.

         The Code treats interest on private activity bonds, as defined therein,
as an item of tax preference subject to the federal alternative minimum tax (the
"AMT") on individuals  and  corporations  at the applicable tax rates. As of the
printing of this SAI,  individuals are subject to AMT at a maximum marginal rate
of 28% and  corporations at a rate of 20%.  Shareholders  are advised to consult
their  tax  advisers   with  respect  to  other  "tax   preference   items"  and
"adjustments"  which must be considered when calculating the shareholders'  AMT.
Corporate  shareholders  will  generally  be required to include all interest on
municipal  bonds and other  tax-exempt  obligations  (including  exempt-interest
dividends paid by a Fund) in adjusted  current  earnings in calculating  federal
alternative  minimum taxable income.  The receipt of tax-exempt amounts may also
affect corporate federal environmental tax liability.

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<PAGE>

         Interest on indebtedness incurred by a shareholder to purchase or carry
Fund  shares is not  deductible  for  Federal  income tax  purposes if that Fund
distributes  exempt-interest dividends during the shareholder's taxable year. In
addition, if a shareholder holds Fund shares for six months or less, any loss on
the sale or exchange of those  shares  will be  disallowed  to the extent of the
amount of exempt-interest  dividends  received with respect to the shares.  Such
disallowance does not apply to losses realized under a periodic redemption plan.
Further, the Treasury Department is authorized to issue regulations reducing the
six months  holding  requirement  to a period of not less than the greater of 31
days or the period between regular dividend  distributions  where the investment
company regularly  distributes at least 90% of its net tax-exempt  interest.  No
such regulations had been issued as of the date of this SAI.

         Although  each Fund  expects  to  qualify  as a  "regulated  investment
company" and to be relieved of substantially all Federal and, in the case of the
Florida  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund and  Florida  Municipal  Bond  Fund,
Georgia  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund and  Georgia  Municipal  Bond  Fund,
Maryland  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund and Maryland  Municipal  Bond Fund,
North Carolina  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund and North Carolina  Municipal
Bond Fund,  South Carolina  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and South Carolina
Municipal Bond Fund,  Tennessee  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and Tennessee
Municipal Bond Fund, and Virginia Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and Virginia
Municipal Bond Fund,  Florida State  intangible tax, and the Georgia,  Maryland,
North  Carolina,  South  Carolina,  or  Virginia  state  income  taxes,  and the
Tennessee Hall Income Tax on unearned income,  respectively,  depending upon the
extent of its  activities  in states and  localities  in which its  offices  are
maintained,  in which its agents or independent  contractors are located,  or in
which it is otherwise deemed to be conducting business, the Funds may be subject
to the tax laws of such states or localities.

         Distributions   other   than   exempt-interest   dividends,   including
distributions  of interest in Municipal  Securities  issued by other issuers and
all long-term and  short-term  capital gains will be subject to state income tax
(other  than  Florida  and  Texas)  unless  specifically   exempted  by  statute
including, in the case of Virginia,  statutory provisions creating the agency or
political subdivision.

         Florida  does not  impose a personal  income  tax,  but does  impose an
annual  intangible   personal  property  tax  on  intangible  personal  property
(including  but not  limited  to stocks or shares of  business  trusts or mutual
funds) held by persons  domiciled in the State of Florida,  regardless  of where
such  property is kept.  Florida  counsel  has,  however,  advised the Fund that
shares in the Nations Florida  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and the Nations
Florida  Municipal  Bond  Fund  shall not be  subject  to  Florida's  intangible
personal  property  tax if on January 1 of each tax year the  portfolio  of such
Fund consists  exclusively of obligations of the government of the United States
of America,  its agencies,  instrumentalities,  the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico,
the government of Guam, the government of American Samoa,  the government of the
Northern  Mariana  Islands,  the State of Florida,  its political  subdivisions,
municipalities or other taxing districts.  Nations Fund has received a Technical
Assistance  Advisement  from the Florida  Department of Revenue  confirming  the
foregoing.

         Although  the  Nations  Florida  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund and
Nations  Florida   Municipal  Bond  Fund  anticipate  that  the  portfolio  will
exclusively  contain assets that are exempt from Florida's  intangible  personal
property  tax on  January  1 of each  tax  year,  it may be  possible

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<PAGE>

that the portfolio will have a small portion of its assets invested  temporarily
in assets on such date which are not exempt  from  Florida's  annual  intangible
personal  property  tax.  In this  situation,  only the portion of the net asset
value of the  portfolio  which is made up of direct  obligations  of the  United
States of America,  its  agencies,  territories  and  possessions  (as described
above) may be removed  from the net asset value for  purposes of  computing  the
intangible personal property tax. The remaining net asset value of the portfolio
and hence a portion of the net asset value of the shares in the Nations  Florida
Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and Nations Florida  Municipal Bond Fund would
be subject to the intangible  personal property tax. Notice as to the tax status
of your shares will be mailed to you  annually.  Owners of shares in the Nations
Florida Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund or Nations Florida Municipal Bond Fund
should  consult  their tax  advisers  with  specific  reference to their own tax
situation if advised that a portion of the portfolio of such Funds  consisted on
January  1 of any year of assets  which are not  exempt  from  Florida's  annual
intangible  personal property tax. Such annual intangible personal property tax,
if any,  is due and  payable on June 30 of such year in which the tax  liability
arises.

         The Georgia state intangibles tax was under attack in a case pending in
Dekalb  County  Superior  Court  (Lombard  Corporation  v. Colline et al.) and a
constitutional  amendment  authorizing  the  repeal of the  intangibles  tax was
approved during the 1996 session of the Georgia General Assembly (H.R. 734).

         Nations  Maryland  Intermediate   Municipal  Bond  Fund's  and  Nations
Maryland  Municipal Bond Fund's  shareholders who are residents of Maryland must
add to their federal  adjusted  gross income 50% of their federal tax preference
items (which include interest amounts from private activity bonds) the sum total
of which is in excess of $10,000  for an  individual  return (or  $20,000  for a
joint  return)  when   determining   their   Maryland   adjusted  gross  income.
Shareholders who are nonresidents of Maryland are required to include only those
tax preference items that are based on income taxable in Maryland.

         For tax years  beginning  after 1994,  the deduction for South Carolina
taxable income  purposes for the net capital gains  recognized  from the sale or
exchange  of an asset  which has been held for a period of two or more years has
been increased from 29% to 44%.

         The Tennessee  Hall Income Tax imposes a tax on income  received by way
of  dividends  from  stock or  interest  on bonds.  Dividends  from a  qualified
regulated  investment  company are exempt from the Hall Income Tax,  but only to
the  extent  attributable  to  interest  on  bonds  or  securities  of the  U.S.
Government or any agency or instrumentality  thereof or on bonds of the State of
Tennessee or any county or any  municipality or political  subdivision  thereof,
including any agency, board, authority or commission of any of the above.

         According to the Tax  Foundation in  Washington,  D.C., it is estimated
that "tax  freedom day"  usually  falls  around May 3rd across the  country.  On
average,  the  money  earned  by an  individual  prior to that  date goes to the
payment of taxes.  In addition,  The Tax  Foundation  estimates that the average
taxpayer  needs to work 2 hours and 41 minutes during an eight-hour day to cover
federal,  state and local taxes. In contrast,  it takes only 57 minutes to cover
the average cost of housing and household  expenses.  In recent years,  tax-free
bonds  have been in high  demand due to high tax rates and fewer  available  tax
deductions.  Insured  certificates  of

                                       68

<PAGE>

deposit  and  money  market  funds  have  traditionally  offered  a solid way to
preserve capital and enjoy competitive  yields.  But yields on these investments
have declined considerably.  Because of that, more and more investors have found
it beneficial to look for conservative higher-yielding alternatives,  especially
those that also offer tax relief.

         The  foregoing   general   discussion  of  U.S.   federal   income  tax
consequences  is based on the Code and the regulations  issued  thereunder as in
effect on the date of this SAI. Future legislative or administrative  changes or
court decisions may significantly  change the conclusions  expressed herein, and
any such changes or decisions may have a retroactive  effect with respect to the
transactions contemplated herein.

         Rules of state  and  local  taxation  for  ordinary  income  dividends,
exempt-interest  dividends and capital gain dividends from regulated  investment
companies often differ from the rules for U.S. federal income taxation described
above.  Distributions of net investment income may be taxable to shareholders as
dividend  income under state or local law even though a  substantial  portion of
such distributions may be derived from interest on U.S. Government  obligations,
which, if realized directly,  would be exempt from such taxes.  Shareholders are
urged to consult  their tax advisers as to the  consequences  of these and other
state and local tax rules affecting investment in the Funds.


                              TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS

         The  Trustees and  executive  officers of the Trust,  their  addresses,
principal  occupations during the past five years, and other affiliations are as
set forth below. The address of each, unless otherwise indicated,  is 111 Center
Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201. Those Trustees who are "interested persons"
of the Trust (as defined in the 1940 Act) are indicated by an asterisk (*).

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              Position With         Principal Occupation During
Name, Address and Age                           the Trust           Past 5 Years and Current Directorships
- ---------------------                         --------------        --------------------------------------
<S>                                           <C>                   <C>
Edmund L. Benson, III, 59                     Trustee               Director, President and Treasurer, Saunders &
Saunders & Benson, Inc.                                             Benson, Inc. (insurance); Trustee, Nations
728 East Main Street                                                Institutional Reserves, Director, Nations Fund,
Suite 400                                                           Inc. and Nations Fund Portfolios, Inc.
Richmond, VA  23219
</TABLE>

                                       69

<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              Position With         Principal Occupation During
Name, Address and Age                           the Trust           Past 5 Years and Current Directorships
- ---------------------                         --------------        --------------------------------------
<S>                                           <C>                   <C>
James Ermer, 54                               Trustee               Senior Vice President -- Finance, CSX Corporation
13705 Hickory Nut Point                                             (transportation and natural resources);  Director,
Midlothian, VA  23112                                               National Mine Service; Director, Lawyers Title
                                                                    Corporation; Trustee, Nations Institutional
                                                                    Reserves; Director, Nations Fund, Inc. and Nations
                                                                    Fund Portfolios, Inc.


William H. Grigg, 63                          Trustee               Since April 1994, Chairman and Chief Executive
Duke Power Co.                                                      Officer; November 1991 to April 1994, Vice
422 South Church Street                                             Chairman, Duke Power Co.; from April 1988 to
PB04G                                                               November 1991, Executive Vice President --
Charlotte, NC  28242-0001                                           Customer Group, Duke Power Co., Director, Hatteras
                                                                    Income Securities, Inc., Nations Government Income
                                                                    Term Trust 2003, Inc., Nations Government Income
                                                                    Term Trust 2004, Inc., Nations Balanced Target
                                                                    Maturity Fund, Inc., Nations Fund, Inc. and
                                                                    Nations Fund Portfolios, Inc.; Trustee, Nations
                                                                    Institutional Reserves

Thomas F. Keller, 65                          Trustee               R.J. Reynolds Industries Professor of Business
Fuqua School of Business                                            Administration and Dean, Fuqua School of Business,
P.O. Box 90120                                                      Duke University; Director LADD Furniture, Inc.,
Duke University                                                     Director, Wendy's International Mentor Growth Fund
Durham, NC  27706                                                   and Cambridge Trust; Director, Hatteras Income
                                                                    Securities, Inc., Nations Government Income Term
                                                                    Trust 2003, Inc., Nations Government Income Term
                                                                    Trust 2004, Inc., Nations Balanced Target Maturity
                                                                    Fund, Inc.; Nations Fund, Inc. and Nations Fund
                                                                    Portfolios, Inc.; Trustee, Nations Institutional
                                                                    Reserves

Carl E. Mundy, Jr., 61                        Trustee               Commandant, United States Marine Corps, from July
9308 Ludgate Drive                                                  1991 to July 1995, Commanding General, Marine
Alexandria, VA  22309                                               Forces Atlantic, from June 1990 to June 1991;
                                                                    Director, Nations Fund, Inc. and Nations Fund
                                                                    Portfolios, Inc.; Trustee, Nations Institutional
                                                                    Reserves

A. Max Walker*, 74                            President, Trustee    Financial consultant, formerly President, A. Max
4580 Windsor Gate Court                       and Chairman of the   Walker, Inc.; Director and Chairman of the Board,
Atlanta, GA  30342                            Board                 Hatteras Income Securities, Inc., Nations
                                                                    Government Income Term Trust 2003, Inc., Nations
                                                                    Government Income Term Trust 2004,
</TABLE>

                                       70

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              Position With         Principal Occupation During
Name, Address and Age                           the Trust           Past 5 Years and Current Directorships
- ---------------------                         --------------        --------------------------------------
<S>                                           <C>                   <C>
                                                                    Inc., Nations Balanced Target Maturity Fund,
                                                                    Inc.; Nations Fund, Inc. and Nations Fund
                                                                    Portfolios, Inc.; President and Chairman of the
                                                                    Board of Trustees, Nations Institutional Reserves

Charles B. Walker, 57                         Trustee               Since 1989, Director, Executive Vice President,
Ethyl Corporation                                                   Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, Ethyl
330 South Fourth Street                                             Corporation (chemicals, plastics and aluminum
Richmond, VA  23219                                                 manufacturing); since 1994, Vice Chairman, Ethyl
                                                                    Corporation and Vice Chairman, Chief Financial
                                                                    Officer and Treasurer, Albemarle Corporation;
                                                                    Director, Nations Fund, Inc. and Nations Fund
                                                                    Portfolios, Inc.; Trustee, Nations Institutional
                                                                    Reserves

Thomas S. Word, Jr.*, 58                      Trustee               Partner, McGuire Woods Battle & Boothe (law);
McGuire, Woods, Battle & Boothe                                     Director, Vaughan Bassett Furniture Company,
One James Center, 8th Floor                                         Director V-B/Williams Furniture Company, Inc.;
Richmond, VA  23219                                                 Director, Nations Fund, Inc. and Nations Fund
                                                                    Portfolios, Inc.; Trustee, Nations Institutional
                                                                    Reserves

Richard H. Blank, Jr., 40                     Secretary             Since 1994, Vice President of Mutual Funds
Stephens Inc.                                                       Services, Stephens Inc. 1990 to 1994, Manager
                                                                    Mutual Fund Services, Stephens Inc. 1983 to 1990,
                                                                    Associate in Corporate Finance Department,
                                                                    Stephens Inc.

Michael W. Nolte, 35                          Assistant Secretary   Associate, Financial Services Group of Stephens
Stephens Inc.                                                       Inc.

Louise P. Newcomb, 44                         Assistant Secretary   Corporation Syndicate Associate, Stephens Inc.
Stephens Inc.

James E. Banks, 40                            Assistant Secretary   Since 1993 Attorney, Stephens Inc.; Associate
Stephens Inc.                                                       Corporate Counsel, Federated Investors; from 1991
                                                                    to 1993, Staff Attorney, Securities and Exchange
                                                                    Commission from 1988 to 1991.
</TABLE>

                                       71

<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              Position With         Principal Occupation During
Name, Address and Age                           the Trust           Past 5 Years and Current Directorships
- ---------------------                         --------------        --------------------------------------
<S>                                           <C>                   <C>
Richard H. Rose, 41                           Treasurer             Since 1994, Vice President, Division Manager,
First Data Investor Services Group, Inc.                            First Data Investor Services Group, Inc., since
One Exchange Place                                                  1988, Senior Vice President, The Boston Company
Boston, MA  02109                                                   Advisors, Inc.;  Treasurer, Nations Institutional
                                                                    Reserves, Nations Fund, Inc. and Nations
                                                                    Portfolios, Inc.

Joseph C. Viselli, 32                         Assistant Treasurer   Since 1994, Director, First Data Investor Services
First Data Services Group, Inc.                                     Group, Inc., since 1992, Assistant Vice President,
One Exchange Place                                                  The Boston Company Advisors, Inc., since 1989,
Boston, MA  02109                                                   Senior Accountant, Price Waterhouse LLP

Susan Manter, 42                              Assistant Treasurer   Since 1996, Vice President, First Data Investor
First Data Investor Services Group, Inc.                            Services Group, Inc., since 1994, Vice President,
One Exchange Place                                                  Scudder Stevens and Clark, Inc., previously Senior
Boston, MA  02109                                                   Manager, Coopers & Lybrand LLP
</TABLE>


         Mr. Rose serves as Treasurer to certain other investment  companies for
which First Data (the  "Co-Administrator")  or its affiliates  serve as sponsor,
distributor, administrator and/or investment adviser.

         Each Trustee of the Trust is also a Director of Nations Fund,  Inc. and
Nations Fund Portfolios,  Inc. and a trustee of Nations Institutional  Reserves,
each, a registered investment company that is part of the Nations Fund family of
funds. Richard H. Blank, Jr., Richard H. Rose, Joseph C. Viselli,  Susan Manter,
Michael W. Nolte, Louise P. Newcomb and James E. Banks, Jr. also are officers of
Nations Fund,  Inc.,  Nations Fund  Portfolios,  Inc. and Nations  Institutional
Reserves.

         Each Trustee  receives (i) an annual retainer of $1,000 ($3,000 for the
Chairman of the Board) plus $500 for each Fund of the Trust,  plus (ii) a fee of
$1,000 for attendance at each  "in-person"  meeting of the Board of Trustees (or
committee thereof) and $500 for attendance at each other meeting of the Board of
Trustees  (or  committee  thereof).  All  Trustees  receive  reimbursements  for
expenses  related to their  attendance  at  meetings  of the Board of  Trustees.
Officers  receive no direct  remuneration  in such capacity  from the Trust.  No
person who is an officer, director, or employee of NationsBank or its affiliates
serves as an  officer,  Trustee,  or  employee of the Trust.  The  Trustees  and
officers of Nations Fund own less than 1% of the shares of the Trust.

         The Trust  has  adopted a Code of Ethics  which,  among  other  things,
prohibits each access person of the Trust from purchasing or selling  securities
when  such  person  knows  or  should  have  known  that,  at  the  time  of the
transaction,  the  security (i) was

                                       72

<PAGE>

being  considered for purchase or sale by a Fund, or (ii) was being purchased or
sold by a Fund. For purposes of the Code of Ethics, an access person means (i) a
Trustee or officer of the Trust,  (ii) any employee of the Trust (or any company
in a control  relationship with the Trust) who, in the course of his/her regular
duties, obtains information about, or makes recommendations with respect to, the
purchase or sale of securities by the Trust,  and (iii) any natural  person in a
control   relationship  with  the  Trust  who  obtains  information   concerning
recommendations  made to the Trust regarding the purchase or sale of securities.
Portfolio  managers and other persons who assist in the  investment  process are
subject to additional  restrictions,  including a requirement that they disgorge
to the Trust any profits realized on short-term trading (i.e., the purchase/sale
or sale/purchase of securities within any 60-day period). The above restrictions
do not apply to purchases  or sales of certain  types of  securities,  including
mutual funds  shares,  money  market  instruments  and certain  U.S.  Government
securities.  To facilitate  enforcement,  the Code of Ethics generally  requires
that the Trust's access persons, other than its "disinterested" Trustees, submit
reports to the  Trust's  designated  compliance  person  regarding  transactions
involving securities which are eligible for purchase by a Fund.

Nations Funds Retirement Plan

         Under the  terms of the  Nations  Funds  Retirement  Plan for  Eligible
Trustees  (the  "Retirement  Plan"),  each  trustee  may be  entitled to certain
benefits upon retirement from the Board of Trustees.  Pursuant to the Retirement
Plan, the normal  retirement date is the date on which the eligible  trustee has
attained age 65 and has completed at least five years of continuous service with
one or  more of the  open-end  investment  companies  ("Funds")  advised  by the
Adviser.  If a trustee  retires before reaching age 65, no benefits are payable.
Each  eligible  trustee is entitled to receive an annual  benefit from the Funds
commencing  on the first day of the  calendar  quarter  coincident  with or next
following his date of retirement  equal to 5% of the  aggregate  trustee's  fees
payable by the Funds during the calendar year in which the trustee's  retirement
occurs  multiplied by the number of years of service (not in excess of ten years
of service)  completed with respect to any of the Funds. Such benefit is payable
to each eligible trustee in quarterly  installments for a period of no more than
five years.  If an eligible  trustee dies after  attaining age 65, the trustee's
surviving  spouse (if any) will be entitled to receive 50% of the benefits  that
would have been paid (or would have  continued to have been paid) to the trustee
if he had not died. The Retirement  Plan is unfunded.  The benefits owed to each
trustee are unsecured and subject to the general creditors of the Funds.

Nations Funds Deferred Compensation Plan

         Under the terms of the Nations  Funds  Deferred  Compensation  Plan for
Eligible Trustees (the "Deferred Compensation Plan"), each trustee may elect, on
an annual basis, to defer all or any portion of the annual board fees (including
the annual  retainer and all  attendance  fees)  payable to the trustee for that
calendar year. An application was submitted to and approved by the SEC to permit
deferring  trustees to elect to tie

                                       73

<PAGE>

the rate of return on fees deferred  pursuant to the Deferred  Compensation Plan
to one or more of certain investment portfolios of certain Funds.  Distributions
from  the  deferring  trustees'  deferral  accounts  will be paid  in  cash,  in
generally equal quarterly  installments over a period of five years beginning on
the  date  the  deferring  trustee's  retirement  benefits  commence  under  the
Retirement Plan. The Board of Trustees,  in its sole discretion,  may accelerate
or extend such payments after a trustee's termination of service. If a deferring
trustee dies prior to the  commencement  of the  distribution  of amounts in his
deferral account, the balance of the deferral account will be distributed to his
designated  beneficiary in a lump sum as soon as practicable after the trustee's
death. If a deferring trustee dies after the commencement of such  distribution,
but prior to the complete  distribution of his deferral account,  the balance of
the  amounts  credited  to his  deferral  account  will  be  distributed  to his
designated  beneficiary over the remaining period during which such amounts were
distributable  to the trustee.  Amounts payable under the Deferred  Compensation
Plan are not funded or secured in any way and deferring trustees have the status
of unsecured creditors of the Funds from which they are deferring compensation.


                                                      COMPENSATION TABLE
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  Aggregate                                      Estimated Annual
                                Compensation         Pension or Retirement        Benefits Upon      Total Compensation from
      Name of Person               from               Benefits Accrued as           Retirement        Registrant and Fund
       Position (1)            Registrant (2)        Part of Fund Expenses                               Complex (3)(4)
      -------------            --------------        ---------------------       ----------------    ------------------------      
<S>                           <C>                  <C>                           <C>                 <C>    
Edmund L. Benson, III,              $24,381                 $19,488                  $21,000                $49,119
Trustee
James Ermer                          22,875                  19,488                   21,000                 44,250
Trustee
William H. Grigg                     25,349                  19,488                   21,000                 66,397
Trustee
Thomas F. Keller                     25,434                  19,488                   21,000                 68,597
Trustee
A. Max Walker                        25,375                  19,488                   25,000                 75,250
Chairman of the Board
Charles B. Walker                    22,375                  19,488                   21,000                 43,750
Trustee
Thomas S. Word                       25,426                  19,488                   21,000                 51,579
Trustee
Carl E. Mundy, Jr.                   11,375                       0                   21,000                 25,875
Trustee
</TABLE>

                                       74


<PAGE>

(1)The  Compensation  Table provides data  concerning the  compensation  paid to
Trustees of the Trust during the  twelve-month  period ended March 31, 1996. All
trustees  receive  reimbursements  for expenses  related to their  attendance at
meetings  of the Board of  Trustees.  Officers  of the Trust  receive  no direct
remuneration in such capacity from the Trust.

(2)For the fiscal period from  December 1, 1995 to March 31, 1996.  Each Trustee
receives (i) an annual retainer of $1,000 ($3,000 for the Chairman of the Board)
plus $500 for each Fund of the Trust,  plus (ii) a fee of $1,000 for  attendance
at each "in-person"  meeting of the Board of Trustees (or committee thereof) and
$500 for attendance at each other meeting of the Board of Trustees (or Committee
thereof).

(3)Messrs.  Grigg,  Keller  and A.M.  Walker  receive  compensation  from  eight
investment  companies,  including  the Trust,  that are deemed to be part of the
Nations Fund "fund  complex," as that term is defined  under Rule 14a-101 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.  Messrs.  Benson, Ermer, C. Walker,
Mundy and Word receive  compensation from four investment  companies,  including
the Trust, deemed to be part of the Nations Fund complex.

(4)Total compensation amounts include deferred compensation (including interest)
payable  to or  accrued  for the  following  Trustees:  Edmund  L.  Benson,  III
($25,744); William H. Grigg ($47,897); Thomas F. Keller ($51,596); and Thomas S.
Word ($54,579).


Shareholder and Trustee Liability

         Under  Massachusetts  law,  shareholders of a business trust may, under
certain circumstances, be held personally liable as partners for the obligations
of  the  trust.   However,  the  Trust's  Declaration  of  Trust  provides  that
shareholders  shall not be subject  to any  personal  liability  for the acts or
obligations of the Trust, and that every note, bond,  contract,  order, or other
undertaking  made by the Trust shall  contain a provision to the effect that the
shareholders  are not personally  liable  thereunder.  The  Declaration of Trust
provides for  indemnification  out of the trust property of any shareholder held
personally liable solely by reason of his being or having been a shareholder and
not because of his acts or omissions or some other reason.  The  Declaration  of
Trust also  provides that the Trust shall,  upon request,  assume the defense of
any claim made against any  shareholder  for any act or  obligation of the Trust
and  shall  satisfy  any  judgment  thereon.  Thus,  the  risk of a  shareholder
incurring  financial  loss on account  of  shareholder  liability  is limited to
circumstances in which the Trust itself would be unable to meet its obligations.

         The  Declaration of Trust states further that no Trustee,  officer,  or
agent of the Trust shall be personally liable for or on account of any contract,
debt, tort, claim, damage,  judgment, or decree arising out of or connected with
the  administration  or  preservation  of the trust estate or the conduct of any
business of the Trust; nor shall any Trustee be personally  liable to any person
for any action or failure to act except by reason of his own bad faith,  willful
misfeasance,  gross negligence,  or reckless disregard of his duties as Trustee.
The Declaration of Trust also provides that all persons having any claim against
the Trustees or the Trust shall look solely to the trust property for payment.

         With the exceptions  stated,  the  Declaration of Trust provides that a
Trustee is  entitled to be  indemnified  against all  liabilities  and  expenses
reasonably  incurred by him

                                       75

<PAGE>

in connection  with the defense or disposition of any proceeding in which he may
be involved or with which he may be  threatened by reason of his being or having
been a  Trustee,  and that the  Trustees  have the power,  but not the duty,  to
indemnify  officers and  employees of the Trust unless any such person would not
be entitled to indemnification had he or she been a Trustee.


                  INVESTMENT ADVISORY, ADMINISTRATION, CUSTODY,
               TRANSFER AGENCY, SHAREHOLDER SERVICING, SHAREHOLDER
                   ADMINISTRATION AND DISTRIBUTION AGREEMENTS

Investment Adviser

         Effective January 1, 1996, NBAI began serving as investment  adviser to
the Funds of the Trust,  pursuant  to an  Investment  Advisory  Agreement  dated
January  1,  1996.  Effective  January 1,  1996,  TradeStreet  began  serving as
sub-investment  adviser to the Funds of the Trust,  pursuant  to a  Sub-Advisory
Agreement dated January 1, 1996.

         NBAI also  serves as the  investment  adviser  to Nations  Fund,  Inc.,
Nations  Institutional  Reserves  and  Nations  Fund  Portfolios,  Inc.,  each a
registered  investment  company  that is part of the  Nations  Fund  Family.  In
addition,  NBAI serves as the investment  advisor to Hatteras Income Securities,
Inc., Nations Government Income Term Trust 2003, Inc., Nations Government Income
Term Trust 2004, Inc. and Managed  Balanced  Target Maturity Fund,  Inc., each a
closed-end  diversified  management  investment  company  traded on the New York
Stock Exchange.  TradeStreet also serves as the sub-investment adviser to all of
the funds of Nations Fund, Inc.,  except the  International  Equity Fund, and to
Nations  Institutional  Reserves,  Hatteras  Income  Securities,  Inc.,  Nations
Government  Income Term Trust 2003, Inc.,  Nations  Government Income Term Trust
2004, Inc. and Managed Balanced Target Maturity Fund, Inc.

         NBAI and  TradeStreet  are each wholly owned  banking  subsidiaries  of
NationsBank,  which in turn is a wholly owned banking  subsidiary of NationsBank
Corporation, a bank holding company organized as a North Carolina corporation.

         Prior  to  January  1,  1996,   NationsBank,   through  its  investment
management division,  served as investment adviser to the Funds.  NationsBank is
successor to NationsBank of North Carolina,  N.A. which was merged with and into
NationsBank of South Carolina,  N.A.,  effective  January 3, 1995. The resulting
entity was renamed NationsBank, N.A. (Carolinas).  NationsBank is a wholly owned
subsidiary of NationsBank Corporation, a bank holding company. Prior to June 30,
1992,  NationsBank  of Georgia,  N.A.  served as the  Investment  Adviser to the
Trust. On December 31, 1991 an Agreement and Plan of Consolidation  between NCNB
Corporation  ("NCNB") and C&S Sovran Corporation  ("C&S/Sovran") was consummated
whereby  C&S/Sovran was merged into and became a wholly owned

                                       76

<PAGE>

subsidiary  of NCNB and NCNB  changed its name to  NationsBank  Corporation.  In
anticipation of this transaction, the prior investment adviser for the Trust was
changed from Sovran Bank,  N.A., to C&S/Sovran  Trust  Company  (Georgia),  N.A.
After the merger of C&S/Sovran and NCNB was completed,  C&S Sovran Trust Company
(Georgia),  N.A., changed its name to NationsBank Trust Company (Georgia), N.A.,
and  subsequently  merged into  NationsBank of Georgia,  N.A. which continued to
serve as the investment adviser to Nations Fund Trust until June 30, 1992. Prior
to the merger of NCNB and C&S/Sovran,  NationsBank  (formerly NCNB National Bank
of North Carolina) served and continues to serve as investment adviser to all of
the Funds of the Trust  pursuant  to an  amendment  to its  investment  advisory
agreements.  NationsBank  and  NationsBank  of Georgia,  N.A.  are wholly  owned
subsidiaries of NationsBank Corporation.

         Since 1874,  NationsBank and its predecessors  have been managing money
for  foundations,  universities,  corporations,  institutions  and  individuals.
Today,  NationsBank  affiliates  collectively  manage in excess of $60  billion,
including  the more than $18  billion  in mutual  fund  assets.  It is a company
dedicated to a goal of providing responsible  investment management and superior
service.  NationsBank is recognized for its sound investment  approaches,  which
place it among the nation's foremost financial institutions. NationsBank and its
affiliates  organization  makes available a wide range of financial  services to
its over 6 million customers  through over 1700 banking and investment  centers.
Approximately  12 of  NationsBank  personnel  are  involved  in  stock  and bond
research.

         NationsBank  restructured  its  investment  management  division  as of
January 1, 1996 by  reorganizing  the division into two  separate,  wholly owned
advisory subsidiaries,  NBAI and TradeStreet.  The restructuring resulted in the
transfer of the division's investment management and advisory functions to NBAI,
and  its  day  to day  investment  company  portfolio  management  functions  to
TradeStreet.  The  investment  professionals  who performed  investment  company
management  functions and who managed the  companies  portfolios as employees of
NationsBank  continue  to  perform  such  services  as  employees  of  NBAI  and
TradeStreet, respectively. The restructuring did not change the scope and nature
of  investment   advisory   services   provided  to  the  relevant  Funds.   The
restructuring,  and  related  Investment  Advisory  Agreement  and  Sub-Advisory
Agreement,  were  approved  by the Board of Trustees of the Trust at the October
12-13, 1995 Board Meeting.

      The Investment Advisory Agreement for NBAI and Sub-Advisory  Agreement for
TradeStreet each provides that in the absence of willful misfeasance, bad faith,
negligence or reckless disregard of obligations or duties thereunder on the part
of NBAI or Trade  Street,  respectively,  or any of their  respective  officers,
directors,  employees  or agents,  NBAI or  TradeStreet  shall not be subject to
liability  to the  Trust  or to any  shareholder  of the  Trust  for  any act or
omission in the course of, or connected with,  rendering services  thereunder or
for any losses that may be  sustained  in the  purchase,  holding or sale of any
security.

                                       77

<PAGE>

      The Investment Advisory Agreement shall become effective with respect to a
Fund if and when  approved  by the  Trustees of the Trust,  and if so  approved,
shall thereafter  continue from year to year, provided that such continuation of
the Agreement is specifically  approved at least annually by (a) (i) the Trust's
Board of  Trustees or (ii) the vote of "a  majority  of the  outstanding  voting
securities" of a Fund (as defined in Section  2(a)(42) of the 1940 Act), and (b)
the affirmative  vote of a majority of the Trust's  Trustees who are not parties
to such  Agreement  or  "interested  persons"  (as defined in the 1940 Act) of a
party to such Agreement (other than as Trustees of the Trust),  by votes cast in
person at a meeting specifically called for such purpose.

      The Investment  Advisory  Agreement will  terminate  automatically  in the
event of its  assignment,  and is terminable  with respect to a Fund at any time
without  penalty by the Trust (by vote of the Board of  Trustees or by vote of a
majority  of the  outstanding  voting  securities  of the Fund) or by NBAI on 60
days' written notice.

      The  Sub-Advisory  Agreement  shall become  effective with respect to each
Fund as of its execution date and, unless sooner  terminated,  shall continue in
full force and effect for one year,  and may be  continued  with respect to each
Fund thereafter, provided that the continuation of the Agreement is specifically
approved at least  annually by (a) (i) the Trust's Board of Trustees or (ii) the
vote of "a majority of the outstanding  voting securities" of a Fund (as defined
in Section 2(a)(42) of the 1940 Act), and (b) the affirmative vote of a majority
of the Trust's  Trustees who are not parties to such  Agreement  or  "interested
persons" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of a party to such  Agreement  (other than
as  Trustees of the  Trust),  by votes cast in person at a meeting  specifically
called for such purpose.

      The  Sub-Advisory  Agreement will terminate  automatically in the event of
its  assignment,  and is  terminable  with respect to a Fund at any time without
penalty by the Trust (by vote of the Board of  Trustees or by vote of a majority
of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund), or by NBAI, or by TradeStreet
on 60 days' written notice.

         The table below states the net advisory fees paid to NationsBank and/or
its   wholly-owned   affiliate  NBAI,  the  advisory  fees  waived  and  expense
reimbursements  where  applicable for the fiscal period from December 1, 1995 to
March 31, 1996.

                                       78

<PAGE>

                                  ADVISORY FEES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                            Net Amt.                  Amount               Reimbsd.
                             Paid                     Waived               by Advsr.
<S>                        <C>                     <C>                      <C>    
Nations
Government                 $ 195,815.00            $442,122.00              $  0.00
   Money
Market Fund
Nations Tax
Exempt
  Fund                       600,930.00           1,248,939.00                 0.00
Nations                    2,808,328.00                   0.00                 0.00
Value Fund
Nations
Capital
  Growth Fund              2,253,497.00                   0.00                 0.00
Nations
Disciplined
  Equity Fund                339,082.00                   0.00                 0.00
Nations
Equity
  Index Fund                  64,733.00                   0.00                 0.00
Nations
Emerging
  Growth Fund                777,193.00                   0.00                 0.00
Nations
Balanced
  Assets Fund                590,332.00                  00.0                  0.00
Nations
Short-Inter-
  mediate                    619,149.00             384,574.00                 0.00
Gov't Fund
Nations
Short-Term
  Income Fund                173,410.00             216,740.00                 0.00
Nations
Diversified
  Income Fund                286,700.00              57,340.00                 0.00
Nations
Strategic
  Fixed                    1,388,673.00             294,244.00                 0.00
Income Fund
Nations
Municipal
  Income Fund                114,363.00             117,368.00                 0.00
Nations
Short-Term
  Municipal
Income
  Fund                        12,972.00              99,745.00                 0.00
Nations
Intermediate
  Municipal                   45,524.00              89,165.00                 0.00
Bond  Fund
Nations
Florida

Intermediate
  Municipal
  Bond Fund                   25,169.00              62,242.00                 0.00
Nations
Georgia

Intermediate
Municipal
  Bond Fund                   33,891.00              64,182.00                 0.00
Nations
Maryland

Intermediate
  Municipal                   59,770.00              93,011.00                 0.00
Bond   Fund
Nations
North
 Carolina                     17,326.00              47,071.00                 0.00
Intermediate
 Municipal
 Bond Fund
Nations
South Carolina
Intermediate                  42,310.00              75,330.00                 0.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations
Tennessee
                                   0.00              31,491.00              1,332.00
Intermediate
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations Texas
 Intermediate
 Municipal                    11,045.00              41,063.00                 0.00
Bond Fund
Nations
Virginia
 Intermediate                196,295.00             215,292.00                 0.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations
Florida                       34,641.00              44,125.00                 0.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations
Georgia                        4,774.00              25,162.00                 0.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations
Maryland                         108.00              27,352.00                 0.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations North
 Carolina
Municipal                   $ 24,232.00            $ 38,851.00              $  0.00
 Bond Fund
Nations South
 Carolina
Municipal                      
</TABLE>

                                       79

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                            Net Amt.                  Amount               Reimbsd.
                             Paid                     Waived               by Advsr.
<S>                        <C>                     <C>                      <C>    
                               5,358.00              27,497.00                   0

 Bond Funds
Nations
Tennessee                          0                 15,588.00             5,817.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations Texas
 Municipal                     6,913.00              28,200.00                 0.00
Bond Fund
Nations
Virginia                      11,162.00              29,711.00                 0.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
</TABLE>



        The table below states the net  sub-advisory  fees paid to  Tradestreet,
the sub-advisory fees waived and expense reimbursements where applicable for the
fiscal period from January 1, 1996 to March 31, 1996.




                                  ADVISORY FEES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                             Net Amt.                    Amount              Reimbsd.
                              Paid                       Waived              by Advsr.
<S>                        <C>                           <C>                 <C>    
Nations
Government                   $65,559.22                  $  0.00             $  0.00
   Money
Market Fund
Nations Tax
Exempt
  Fund                       195,836.30                     0.00                0.00
Nations                      702,508.52                     0.00                0.00
Value Fund
Nations
Capital
  Growth Fund                558,981.57                     0.00                0.00
Nations
Disciplined
  Equity Fund                 85,311.87                     0.00                0.00
Nations
Equity
  Index Fund                  41,386.62                     0.00                0.00
Nations
Emerging
  Growth Fund                194,888.10                     0.00                0.00
Nations
Balanced
  Assets Fund                146,994.87                     0.00                0.00
Nations
Short-Inter-
  mediate                    185,611.41                     0.00                0.00
Gov't Fund
Nations
Short-Term
  Income Fund                 73,671.51                     0.00                0.00
Nations
Diversified
  Income Fund                 63,997.63                     0.00                0.00
Nations
Strategic
  Fixed                      313,681.03                     0.00                0.00
Income Fund
Nations
Municipal
  Income Fund                 20,092.35                     0.00                0.00
Nations
Short-Term
  Municipal
Income
  Fund                        11,904.57                     0.00                0.00
Nations
Intermediate
  Municipal                   14,212.28                     0.00                0.00
Bond  Fund
Nations
Florida

Intermediate
  Municipal
  Bond Fund                    9,158.98                     0.00                0.00
Nations
Georgia

Intermediate
Municipal
  Bond Fund                  $10,161.88                  $  0.00             $  0.00
Nations
Maryland

Intermediate
  Municipal                   15,999.36                     0.00                0.00
Bond   Fund
Nations
North
 Carolina                      6,729.45                     0.00                0.00
Intermediate
 Municipal
 Bond Fund
Nations
South Carolina
Intermediate
 Municipal
</TABLE>

                                       80

<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                             Net Amt.                    Amount              Reimbsd.
                              Paid                       Waived              by Advsr.
<S>                        <C>                           <C>                 <C>    
Bond Fund                     12,199.38                     0.00                0.00
Nations
Tennessee
                               3,812.00                     0.00                0.00
Intermediate
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations Texas
 Intermediate
 Municipal                     5,474.20                     0.00                0.00
Bond Fund
Nations
Virginia
 Intermediate                 42,887.69                     0.00                0.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations
Florida                        6,891.65                     0.00                0.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations
Georgia                        2,562.42                     0.00                0.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations
Maryland                       2,390.88                     0.00                0.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
Nations North
 Carolina
Municipal                      5,475.32                     0.00                0.00
 Bond Fund
Nations South
 Carolina
Municipal                      2,870.87                     0.00                0.00
 Bond Fund
Nations
Tennessee                      1,366.28                     0.00
 Municipal                                                                      0.00
Bond Fund
Nations Texas
 Municipal                     3,051.30                     0.00                0.00
Bond Fund
Nations
Virginia                       3,538.33                     0.00                0.00
 Municipal
Bond Fund
</TABLE>



         As discussed above, NationsBank was the investment adviser to the Funds
prior to January  1, 1996.  Prior to April 1, 1995,  ASB  Management,  Inc.  was
sub-investment adviser to Nations Disciplined Equity Fund. A&B Management,  Inc.
received $28,916 as sub-investment advisory fees in 1995. The table below states
the net advisory fees paid to NationsBank,  the advisory fees waived and expense
reimbursements where applicable for the fiscal years ended November 30, 1995 and
1994 where applicable.



                                  ADVISORY FEES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              FY 1995                                    FY 1994
                                              -------                                    -------

                                 Net Amt.       Amount      Reimbsd.    Net Amt.       Amount
                                   Paid         Waived     by Advsr.    Paid           Waived          Reimbsd.by Advsr.
<S>                               <C>          <C>                 <C>    <C>         <C>                <C>
     Nations Government
       Money Market Fund          $  815,364   $1,249,536          $0     $724,416     $1,235,880            $0
     Nations Tax Exempt
             Fund                  1,920,171    2,694,691           0      874,309      2,912,954             0
     Nations Value Fund            7,206,029       25,350           0    6,534,662         53,149             0
       Nations Capital
          Growth Fund              6,269,137            0           0    5,381,628              0             0
     Nations Disciplined
          Equity Fund                370,769          610           0        8,160              0             0
       Nations Equity
          Index Fund                 122,169      523,117           0      102,464        433,345             0
      Nations Emerging
          Growth Fund              1,855,452        3,328           0    1,288,934              0             0
      Nations Balanced
          Assets Fund              1,624,854            0           0    1,805,446              0             0
</TABLE>

                                       81
  
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                              FY 1995                                    FY 1994
                                              -------                                    -------

                                 Net Amt.       Amount      Reimbsd.    Net Amt.       Amount
                                   Paid         Waived     by Advsr.    Paid           Waived          Reimbsd.by Advsr.
<S>                               <C>          <C>                 <C>    <C>         <C>                <C>
     Nations Short-Inter-
      mediate Gov't Fund           2,044,261    1,022,131           0    2,556,715      1,278,358             0
     Nations Short-Term
          Income Fund                564,197      564,197           0      696,393        730,564        34,171
     Nations Diversified
          Income Fund                573,462      114,692           0      329,285        170,640             0
      Nations Strategic
       Fixed Income Fund           3,156,062      631,213           0    2,902,823        427,781             0
      Nations Municipal
          Income Fund                383,148      269,813           0      398,300        279,021        66,736
     Nations Short-Term
       Municipal Income
             Fund                     40,165      255,162           0       42,559        167,405           362
    Nations Intermediate
     Municipal Bond   Fund
                                      99,722      241,595           0      (8,684)        151,227        40,762
       Nations Florida
   Intermediate   Municipal
           Bond Fund                 137,002      113,704           0      154,249        102,832             0
       Nations Georgia
   Intermediate    Municipal
           Bond Fund                 158,113      126,861           0      166,565        111,043             0
      Nations Maryland
         Intermediate
     Municipal Bond   Fund
                                     245,189      191,375           0      287,326        191,550             0
   Nations North  Carolina
   Intermediate  Municipal
          Bond Fund                   94,414       86,937           0       73,680         61,099        17,968
   Nations South  Carolina
Intermediate  Municipal Bond
            Fund                     229,204      143,374           0      271,482        180,988             0
      Nations Tennessee
         Intermediate
     Municipal Bond Fund              29,713       54,285           0       27,480         35,606        25,930
        Nations Texas
         Intermediate
     Municipal Bond Fund              76,262       67,309           0       99,658         70,684         6,366
      Nations Virginia
         Intermediate
     Municipal Bond Fund             831,878      439,488           0    1,138,587        346,587             0
       Nations Florida
     Municipal Bond Fund              31,520      168,010           0      (3,925)        127,352         6,635
       Nations Georgia
     Municipal Bond Fund                   0       73,427       2,470     (57,827)        111,043             0
      Nations Maryland
     Municipal Bond Fund                   0       56,020      15,327     (12,208)         23,155        12,701
        Nations North
      Carolina Municipal
          Bond Fund                   19,600      157,625           0      (6,440)        126,235         9,504
        Nations South
      Carolina Municipal
          Bond Funds                       0       75,568       1,498     (14,381)         44,830        15,335
      Nations Tennessee
     Municipal Bond Fund                   0       40,270      12,792     (10,922)         26,558        13,336
        Nations Texas
     Municipal Bond Fund               1,425       91,303           0     (13,243)         70,358        14,740
      Nations Virginia
     Municipal Bond Fund               3,726      101,277           0      (9,176)         71,728        10,702
</TABLE>

                                       82

<PAGE>

Investment Styles

         When you  invest in any Fund in the  Nations  Fund  Family,  you can be
assured your money is managed  according to a disciplined  investment style; one
that remains  constant  regardless  of  particular  styles  coming in and out of
favor.  The Advisor  believes  this  structured  approach to managing  portfolio
securities may provide you with  consistent  performance  over time. The Adviser
uses  various  investment  strategies  during the  process of  constructing  and
managing  the  Nations  Fund  Trust  portfolios.   These  strategies  have  been
categorized  into investment  styles which consist of (i) the NationsBank  Fixed
Income Style,  (ii) the NationsBank  Growth Equity Style,  (iii) the NationsBank
Value Equity Style and (iv) the NationsBank  Balanced  Assets Style.  Investment
Styles described below relate to the Diversified Income,  Government Securities,
Short-Intermediate  Government,   Short-Term  Income,  Strategic  Fixed  Income,
Intermediate  Municipal Bond,  Municipal  Income,  Short-Term  Municipal Income,
Capital Growth,  Emerging Growth,  Value and Balanced Assets Funds and the State
Intermediate Municipal Bond Funds and the State Municipal Bond Funds.

         NationsBank  Fixed  Income  Style.  The  Nations   Diversified  Income,
Government  Securities,   Short-Intermediate   Government,   Short-Term  Income,
Strategic Fixed Income,  Intermediate  Municipal Bond, Municipal Income, Florida
Intermediate  Municipal Bond,  Georgia  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond,  Maryland
Intermediate  Municipal Bond, North Carolina Intermediate  Municipal Bond, South
Carolina  Intermediate  Municipal Bond, Tennessee  Intermediate  Municipal Bond,
Texas Intermediate  Municipal Bond, Virginia  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund,
Short-Term  Municipal Income Fund and the State Municipal Bond Funds are managed
by the Adviser using the NationsBank  Fixed Income Style. The NationsBank  Fixed
Income  Style  investment  philosophy  is  premised  on the  belief  that a well
diversified  portfolio of fixed income  securities that emphasizes a combination
of investments strategies will capture relative value in the bond market.

         In order to pursue this goal, the Fixed Income Style  includes  certain
biases.  The Adviser  reduces the risk by investing in many  different  issuers.
This is done by setting a maximum  percentage  permitted of any single issuer in
any  portfolio.  Focus on high credit  quality is the second bias.  Holdings are
concentrated in the upper end of the quality  spectrum.  Securities of less than
the highest quality are used only when the team of credit  analysts  support the
conclusion  that the quality will remain  stable or improve,  and that it offers
attractive  potential  in  expected  return.  The third bias is to  de-emphasize
interest rate forecasts.  The  performance of a portfolio  therefore is not held
hostage to the accuracy of a rate forecast.

         This philosophy attempts to achieve consistent results while minimizing
risk.  Five  strategies  are also  utilized  by the  Fixed  Income  Style  Group
Portfolio Managers to meet this objective.

         Sector  Spread  Anomalies:  When sectors of the bond market are over or
under valued,  the  allocation in the portfolios is adjusted  accordingly.  Such
decisions are made based on a sound  analysis of historical  bond values as well
as a review of current market conditions and its impact on future values.

                                       83

<PAGE>

         Yield Curve Anomalies:  Unusual shapes in the yield curve or the degree
of steepness in the yield curve provide opportunities to outperform fixed income
indices.   Such  opportunities  are  reviewed  by  our  specialists  for  return
enhancement  under a variety of possible  interest  rate shifts  before they are
implemented.

         Coupon/Quality  Opportunities:   High  or  low  coupon  securities  may
represent  investment  value  based on supply and demand  conditions  for bonds.
There are also times when  upgrading or  downgrading  of the credit quality of a
bond can enhance a portfolio's return.  Funds hold lower quality bonds only when
the expected reward is substantial  compared to the potential  risks, and credit
analysis supports the conclusion that the credit quality is stable or improving.

         Security  Analysis:  A full staff of credit  analysts is  dedicated  to
supporting fixed income credit  decisions.  This staff gains additional  support
from a substantial  equity  research team when  analyzing  bonds from  corporate
issuers.

         Duration  Management:  The  duration  (price  volatility  of a bond  in
relation to interest  rate  movements) of the  portfolios  may be altered by 10%
shorter or longer than the portfolios normal benchmark.  Changes in duration are
made infrequently and only when they are supported by economic  expectations and
an assessment of value.

         A final portfolio consists of securities that have been selected by the
Fixed Income Style Group Portfolio Managers,  in-house industry  specialists and
expert Wall Street sources all working together.

         NationsBank Growth Equity Style. The Capital Growth and Emerging Growth
Funds are managed by the Adviser using the NationsBank  Growth Equity style. The
NationsBank  Growth Equity Style  investment  philosophy  seeks  companies  with
superior growth prospects  selling at reasonable  prices that, over time, should
outperform the market.

         Emphasis is placed on a "value  adjusted  for growth"  stock  selection
process. Essential to this style is the Adviser's belief that absolute valuation
does  not  capture  the  powerful  effects  of  inflation.  Therefore,  relative
price/earnings  ranges of stocks  going back 5 years are  examined  rather  than
static absolute price/earnings ratio.

         Inflation causes the market  price/earnings  ratio of a stock to expand
or contract.  Investors are willing to pay a higher price for stock in a company
in periods of low  inflation.  The inverse is also true.  The  premium  paid for
growth will increase as inflation declines and decreases as inflation rises.

         The stock  selection  process  begins  with a universe  of  financially
strong  companies.  The  selection  process  selects  companies  with  a  market
capitalization  greater than $500 million (large,  established  companies) and a
strong price momentum (growth in share price over the last 18 months).
This results in a universe of approximately 750 companies.

                                       84

<PAGE>

         These 750 companies are the universe from which the Adviser's  industry
specialists make their final decision for inclusion in an investment  portfolio.
In accordance  with the Growth Equity Style,  portfolio  managers focus on those
stocks  among  the  universe  with the  lowest  price/earnings  ratio and are in
industries with above average earnings growth potential.  The final portfolio of
stocks is then constructed by our Growth Equity Group Senior Portfolio  Managers
who work closely with the in-house industry specialists,  as well as expert Wall
Street sources.

         In  summary,  the  Growth  Equity  Style  seeks to  produce  a  diverse
portfolio  of  large  capitalization  growth  stocks,  that  over  time,  should
outperform the market.

         NationsBank  Value  Equity  Style.  The Value  Fund is  managed  by the
Adviser  using the  NationsBank  Value  Equity  Style.  The Value  Equity  Style
investment  philosophy  is  premised  on the  belief  that  a  well  diversified
portfolio of undervalued  companies  exhibiting low  price/earnings  ratios will
over time outperform the market while incurring lower than market risk.

         This style utilizes a "bottom-up" approach to stock selection, focusing
on well proven factors of fundamental  valuation. A low price/earnings ratio and
above market  dividend  yield are two of the biases which reduce  market risk. A
catalyst for earnings improvement is also one of this Style's requirements as it
assists with the "timing" of the purchase of a particular company.

         Stock  selection  process  begins with a team of 10  in-house  research
specialists aided by a computerized screening model. Starting with approximately
a 2,000 company  universe,  stocks must first pass a rigorous  screening process
that selects only those  companies that possess strong  financial  quality and a
market  capitalization  greater than $500 million. This results in a universe of
approximately  900 companies,  representing all of the 54 major U.S.  industries
and approximately 10 economic sectors.

         A more  sophisticated  screening  process  is then  applied  to the 900
company  universe.  The companies are then ranked based on the following  factor
weightings:

         The top one-third, or approximately 300 companies,  result in the final
universe from which the industry specialists make initial selections for a Fund.
To insure  adherence to the discipline,  price  objectives (buy and sell prices)
are set for each company purchased, based on sound fundamental analysis. A final
diversified  portfolio of  approximately  65 issues is  constructed by the Value
Equity Style Group  Senior  Portfolio  Managers  working  closely with  in-house
industry specialists, as well as expert Wall Street sources.

         In summary,  the low  price/earnings  ratio,  value discipline seeks to
produce a well diversified portfolio of high quality companies,  that over time,
should outperform the market,  thereby adding value while incurring below-market
risk.

                                       85

<PAGE>

         NationsBank  Balanced Asset Style.  The Nations Balanced Assets Fund is
managed  by the  Adviser  using  the  NationsBank  Balanced  Assets  Style.  The
NationsBank Balanced Asset Style investment philosophy is premised on the belief
that  a  diversified  portfolio  of  stocks,  fixed  income,  and  money  market
securities will provide total investment  return through a combination of growth
of capital and current income consistent with preservation of capital.

         In order to pursue this goal,  the  Balanced  Asset  Style  utilizes an
asset  allocation  approach.  Asset  allocation  is a process  of  allocating  a
portfolio's market value among major asset classes (equities,  fixed income, and
cash  equivalents).   Different  asset  classes  have  unique  return  and  risk
characteristics.  The principle  behind asset  allocations is that a diversified
portfolio  of  equities,  fixed  income,  and cash  equivalents  with  different
return/risk  characteristics  will reduce overall  portfolio risk in both up and
down markets.

         The asset  allocation  process begins by making  projections for stock,
bond and cash returns and risk profiles. A computer data analysis identifies the
highest expected return and measures it against the minimum return  requirements
for the balanced  strategy.  Recommendations  are made to an  Investment  Policy
Committee who reviews and approves asset class allocations.

         The stock,  bond and asset allocation  recommendations  are then passed
onto the  Balanced  Asset Group  Senior  Portfolio  Managers  who make the final
investment  decisions.  The  Portfolio  Managers  have the ability to change the
portfolio's  holdings to take  advantage of changing  market  conditions,  while
seeking  an  optimal  balance  of  income,  stability,  and  growth.  Most stock
investments  will be made in companies with above average  earnings and dividend
prospects and overall  financial  market  stability.  All bond purchases will be
investment grade or above. Cash instruments will provide liquidity.

         In summary,  the Balanced Asset Style should  provide total  investment
return through a combination of growth of capital and current income  consistent
with preservation of capital.

         NationsBank  Disciplined  Equity Style. The Nations  Disciplined Equity
Fund is managed by the Adviser using the NationsBank  Disciplined  Equity Style.
The NationsBank Disciplined Equity Style investment philosophy seeks to identify
companies which offer future near-term earnings momentum.

         The Adviser  pursues this  investment  philosophy  through the use of a
proprietary  computerized tracking system (the "Alpha Model") which monitors the
earnings per share estimates of approximately  3,000 Wall Street  analysts,  and
through conventional  security analysis.  In utilizing the computerized tracking
system, the Adviser identifies  companies with respect to which there has been a
change in the  consensus  analyst  estimate of earnings  per share.  The Adviser
believes  that such a change often  signifies  the  beginning of a trend for the
company, rather than an isolated

                                       86

<PAGE>

occurrence,  and that such trend ultimately will be reflected in the share price
of the company.  The Adviser then buys or sells stocks for the Fund based on the
results of this analysis.

         In selecting  stocks  pursuant to the  NationsBank  Disciplined  Equity
Style, the Adviser also uses conventional security analysis techniques. Starting
with  a  universe  of   approximately   2,000   companies   with  large   market
capitalizations,  the Adviser eliminates stocks that have relatively low trading
activity, as well as stocks of companies of poor credit quality and those which,
in the opinion of the Adviser, are overpriced. From the available pool of stocks
that meet all of the criteria, approximately 40 to 50 are selected for inclusion
in the Fund's portfolio.

         The  Adviser  strives to keep the assets of the Fund fully  invested at
all times, except as required to meet expected liquidity needs.

Administrator and Co-Administrator

         Stephens Inc. (the "Administrator") as administrator of the Trust and
First Data Investor Services, Inc. serves as the co-administrator of the Trust
(the "Co-Administrator").

         The  Administrator and  Co-Administrator  serve under an administration
agreement   ("Administration   Agreement")   and   co-administration   agreement
("Co-Administration Agreement"), respectively, each of which was approved by the
Board of Trustees on August 4, 1993. The Administrator receives, as compensation
for its services  rendered under the  Administration  Agreement and as agent for
the  Co-Administrator  for the services it provides under the  Co-Administration
Agreement, an administrative fee, computed daily and paid monthly, at the annual
rate of 0.10% of the average daily net assets of each Fund.

         Pursuant to the Administration  Agreement, the Administrator has agreed
to, among other  things,  (i) maintain  office  facilities  for the Funds,  (ii)
furnish statistical and research data, data processing,  clerical,  and internal
executive and  administrative  services to the Trust,  (iii)  furnish  corporate
secretarial  services to the Trust,  including  coordinating the preparation and
distribution  of materials for Board of Trustees  meetings,  (iv) coordinate the
provision of legal advice to the Trust with respect to regulatory  matters,  (v)
coordinate the preparation of reports to the Trust's  shareholders  and the SEC,
including  annual and  semi-annual  reports,  (vi)  coordinate  the provision of
services  to the Trust by the  Co-Administrator,  the  Transfer  Agents  and the
Custodian,  and (vii) generally assist in all aspects of the Trust's operations.
Additionally,  the  Administrator  is  authorized  to receive,  as agent for the
Co-Administrator,  the fees payable to the Co-Administrator by the Trust for its
services rendered under the Co-Administration Agreement. The Administrator bears
all expenses incurred in connection with the performance of its services.

                                       87

<PAGE>

         Pursuant to the Co-Administration  Agreement,  the Co-Administrator has
agreed to, among other things, (i) provide  accounting and bookkeeping  services
for the Funds,  (ii) compute  each Fund's net asset value and net income,  (iii)
accumulate  information required for the Trust's reports to shareholders and the
SEC,  (iv)  prepare and file the  Trust's  federal  and state tax  returns,  (v)
perform monthly  compliance  testing for the Trust, and (vi) prepare and furnish
the Trust monthly broker security transaction summaries and transaction listings
and performance information. The Co-Administrator bears all expenses incurred in
connection with the performance of its services.

         The Administration Agreement and the Co-Administration Agreement may be
terminated  by a  vote  of a  majority  of  the  Board  of  Trustees,  or by the
Administrator  or  Co-Administrator,  respectively,  on 60 days' written  notice
without penalty. The Administration  Agreement and  Co-Administration  Agreement
are not assignable without the written consent of the other party.  Furthermore,
the Administration  Agreement and the  Co-Administration  Agreement provide that
the Administrator and Co-Administrator, respectively, shall not be liable to the
Funds or to their  shareholders  except  in the case of the  Administrator's  or
Co-Administrator's,   respectively,   willful  misfeasance,   bad  faith,  gross
negligence or reckless disregard of duty.

         The table set forth on the following page states the net administration
fees paid and the  administration  fees waived for the fiscal period ended March
31,  1996 and for the fiscal  years  ended  November  30,  1995 and 1994  (where
applicable).

                               Administration Fees

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                     FY 1996                       FY 1995                        FY 1994
                              ----------------------        ----------------------         --------------------
                              Net Fees        Fees         Net Fees            Fees        Net Fees        Fees
                               Paid          Waived         Paid              Waived         Paid         Waived
<S>                          <C>             <C>              <C>            <C>           <C>           <C>    
Nations Government Money     $139,341.00     $19,949.00       $368,833       $139,379      $119,102      $70,972
Market Fund
Nations Tax Exempt Fund       409,267.00     $52,641.00        791,074        347,743       864,933       81,883
Nations Value Fund            374,444.00           0.00        951,938              0       866,305       12,070
Nations Capital Growth        300,466.00           0.00        825,136              0       664,272       53,278
Fund
Nations Emerging Growth       103,626.00           0.00        244,941              0       159,098       12,760
Fund
Nations Disciplined            45,211.00           0.00         53,136              0         5,026          414
Equity Fund
Nations Equity Index Fund      53,838.00           0.00        127,288              0        94,857       12,305
Nations Balanced Assets        78,711.00           0.00        213,630              0       222,852       17,874
Fund
Nations Short-Intermediate
  Government Fund             167,287.00           0.00        503,568              0       591,720       47,459
Nations Short-Term Income      65,025.00           0.00        185,278              0       225,440       18,081
Fund
Nations Diversified            57,340.00           0.00         80,883              0        77,134        6,187
Income Fund
Nations Strategic Fixed       280,486.00           0.00        623,321              0       513,885      411,216
Income
</TABLE>

                                       88

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                     FY 1996                       FY 1995                        FY 1994
                              ----------------------        ----------------------         --------------------
                              Net Fees        Fees         Net Fees            Fees        Net Fees        Fees
                               Paid          Waived         Paid              Waived         Paid         Waived
<S>                          <C>             <C>              <C>            <C>           <C>           <C>    
Fund
Nations Municipal Income       38,622.00           0.00         79,205         28,128       114,802        9,208
Fund
Nations Short-Term
Municipal
  Income Fund                  22,543.00           0.00         41,135         17,261        26,208       15,857
Nations Intermediate
Municipal
  Bond Fund                    26,938.00           0.00         48,857         18,605        14,603       22,058
Nations Florida
Intermediate
  Municipal Bond Fund          17,482.00           0.00         36,717         12,708        47,598        3,818
Nations Georgia
Intermediate
  Municipal Bond Fund          19,615.00           0.00         41,646         14,573        51,400        4,122
Nations Maryland
Intermediate
  Municipal Bond Fund          30,556.00           0.00         63,726         22,366        88,663        7,112
Nations North Carolina
  Intermediate Municipal
Bond
  Fund                         12,879.00           0.00         26,465          9,257        28,281        2,268
Nations South Carolina
  Intermediate Municipal       23,528.00           0.00         70,495          2,931        83,775        6,719
Bond Fund
Nations Tennessee
Intermediate
  Municipal Bond Fund           6,298.00           0.00         12,193          4,383        16,481        1,322
Nations Texas Intermediate
  Municipal Bond Fund         $10,422.00          $0.00        $20,979         $7,337       $32,717       $2,624
Nations Virginia
Intermediate
  Municipal Bond Fund          82,317.00           0.00        240,312         10,264       275,016       22,058
Nations Florida Municipal
  Bond Fund                    13,127.00           0.00         23,746          9,126        14,712        9,995
Nations Georgia Municipal
  Bond Fund                     4,989.00           0.00          8,688          3,408         4,780        4,089
Nations Maryland Municipal
  Bond Fund                     4,576.00           0.00          6,434          2,815         2,124        1,817
Nations North Carolina
Municipal
  Bond Fund                    10,514.00           0.00         21,537          7,614        13,262        8,288
Nations South Carolina
Municipal
  Bond Fund                     5,476.00           0.00          8,881          3,573         4,113        3,518
Nations Tennessee
Municipal
  Bond Fund                        2,598           0.00          4,816          1,812         3,001        1,828
Nations Texas Municipal
Bond
  Fund                             5,852           0.00         11,093          4,168         6,454        5,522
Nations Virginia Municipal
  Bond Fund                        6,812           0.00         12,592          4,700         6,580        5,629
</TABLE>

                                       89

<PAGE>

         As discussed under the caption  "Expenses," the  Administrator  will be
required  to reduce its fee from the  Trust,  in direct  proportion  to the fees
payable to the Adviser and the  Administrator  by the Trust,  if the expenses of
the Trust exceed the  applicable  expense  limitation  of any state in which the
Funds' shares are registered or qualified for sale.

Custodian and Transfer Agent

         NationsBank of Texas, N.A., serves as custodian for the fund securities
and cash of each Fund.  As  custodian,  NationsBank  of Texas,  N.A.,  maintains
custody of such Funds' securities,  cash and other property, delivers securities
against  payment  upon  sale and  pays  for  securities  against  delivery  upon
purchase,  makes  payments on behalf of such Funds for  payments  of  dividends,
distributions and redemptions, endorses and collects on behalf of such Funds all
checks,  and receives all dividends and other  distributions  made on securities
owned by such Funds. For such services,  NationsBank of Texas, N.A., is entitled
to receive, in addition to out-of-pocket expenses,  fees, payable monthly (i) at
the rate of 1.25% of 1% of the  amortized  cost value of the Money Market Funds'
investments and the average daily net assets of each Non-Money Market Fund, (ii)
$10.00 per repurchase collateral  transaction by each Fund, and (iii) $15.00 per
purchase,  sale and maturity  transaction  involving  each Fund.  NationsBank of
Texas, N.A. is a wholly owned subsidiary of NationsBank Corp.

         First Data Investor Services Group, Inc. ("First Data"), a wholly owned
subsidiary of First Data  Corporation,  which is located at One Exchange  Place,
Boston,  Massachusetts  02109,  acts as transfer  agent for the Trust's  Shares.
Under  the  transfer  agency  agreements,   the  transfer  agent  maintains  the
shareholder  account  records  for the  Trust,  handles  certain  communications
between shareholders and the Trust, and distributes  dividends and distributions
payable by the Trust to  shareholders,  and produces  statements with respect to
account  activity for the Trust and its  shareholders  for these  services.  The
transfer  agent  receives a monthly  fee  computed on the basis of the number of
shareholder  accounts  that it  maintains  for the Trust during the month and is
reimbursed for  out-of-pocket  expenses.  NationsBank  of Texas,  N.A., 901 Main
Street,  Dallas,  Texas  75201,  serves as  sub-transfer  agent for each  Fund's
Primary A and Primary B Shares.

Shareholder Servicing Agreements (Primary B Shares Only)

         As stated in the Prospectuses  for the Primary Shares,  the Trust has a
Shareholder  Servicing Plan with respect to the Primary B Shares for each of the
Funds  except  the Value  Fund,  Capital  Growth  Fund,  Emerging  Growth  Fund,
Disciplined   Equity   Fund,   Equity   Index  Fund,   Balanced   Assets   Fund,
Short-Intermediate  Government Fund, Short-Term Income Fund,  Diversified Income
Fund and  Strategic  Fixed Income Fund.  Pursuant to the  Shareholder  Servicing
Plan, the Trust has entered into agreements with certain banks pertaining to the
provision of  administrative  services to their  customers  who may from time to
time  own  of  record  or  beneficially   Primary  B  Shares   ("Customers")  in
consideration  for the  payment of up to 0.25% (on

                                       90

<PAGE>

an annualized  basis) of the average daily net asset value of such shares.  Such
services may include:  (i)  aggregating  and processing  purchase,  exchange and
redemption  requests for shares from  Customers  and  transmitting  promptly net
purchase and redemption orders with the Distributor or the transfer agents; (ii)
providing  Customers with a service that invests the assets of their accounts in
shares pursuant to specific or  pre-authorized  instructions;  (iii)  processing
dividend and distribution  payments from the Funds on behalf of Customers;  (iv)
providing  information  periodically to Customers including  information showing
their position in shares; (v) responding to Customer inquiries  concerning their
investment  in shares;  (vi)  providing  sub-accounting  with  respect to shares
beneficially owned by Customers or the information necessary for sub-accounting;
(vii)  if  required  by law,  forwarding  shareholder  communications  (such  as
proxies,  shareholder  reports annual and semi-annual  financial  statements and
dividend,  distribution  and tax notices) to  Customers;  (viii)  forwarding  to
Customers proxy  statements and proxies  containing any proposals  regarding the
Shareholder  Servicing  Agreements or Shareholder  Services Plan; (ix) arranging
for bank wires; (x) providing general  shareholder  liaison  services;  and (xi)
providing  such other  similar  services as may  reasonably  be requested to the
extent permitted under applicable statutes, rules or regulations.

Shareholder Administration Plan (Primary B Shares Only)

      As stated in the  Prospectus  describing the Primary B Shares of the Value
Fund, Capital Growth Fund, Emerging Growth Fund, Disciplined Equity Fund, Equity
Index Fund, Balanced Assets Fund, Short-Intermediate Government Fund, Short-Term
Income Fund,  Diversified Income Fund and Strategic Fixed Income Fund, the Trust
has a separate Shareholder  Administration Plan (the "Administration Plan") with
respect to such shares. Pursuant to the Administration Plan, the Trust may enter
into agreements  ("Administration  Agreements") with  broker/dealers,  banks and
other financial  institutions that are dealers of record or holders of record or
which have a servicing  relationship  with the  beneficial  owners of  Non-Money
Market Fund  Primary B Shares  ("Servicing  Agents").  The  Administration  Plan
provides that pursuant to the Administration Agreements,  Servicing Agents shall
provide the shareholder support services as set forth therein to their customers
who may from  time to time own of  record  or  beneficially  Primary B Shares in
consideration for the payment of up to 0.60% (on an annualized basis) of the net
asset value of such  shares.  Such  services may include:  (i)  aggregating  and
processing purchase,  exchange and redemption requests for Primary B Shares from
Customers and transmitting  promptly net purchase and redemption orders with the
Distributor or the transfer agents; (ii) providing Customers with a service that
invests the assets of their accounts in Primary B Shares pursuant to specific or
pre-authorized instructions; (iii) processing dividend and distribution payments
from the Trust on behalf of Customers;  (iv) providing information  periodically
to Customers showing their positions in Primary B Shares; (v) arranging for bank
wires;  (vi) responding to Customer  inquiries  concerning  their  investment in
Primary B Shares;  (vii)  providing  sub-accounting  with  respect  to Primary B
Shares  beneficially  owned  by  Customers  or  the  information  necessary  for
sub-accounting; (viii) if required by law, forwarding shareholder communications
(such  as

                                       91

<PAGE>

proxies,  shareholder  reports annual and semi-annual  financial  statements and
dividend,  distribution  and tax  notices)  to  Customers;  (ix)  forwarding  to
Customers  proxy  statements and proxies  containing any proposals  regarding an
Administration    Agreement;    (x)   employee   benefit   plan   recordkeeping,
administration,  custody and trustee services;  (xi) general shareholder liaison
services and (xii)  providing  such other similar  services as may reasonably be
requested  to  the  extent  permitted  under  applicable  statutes,   rules,  or
regulations.

      The Administration  Plan also provides that in no event may the portion of
the shareholder administration fee that constitutes a "service fee," as the term
is defined in NASD  Service  Plan Rule,  exceed  0.25% of the average  daily net
asset value of the Primary B Shares of the relevant Funds.  In addition,  to the
extent  any  portion  of the fees  payable  under  the Plan is  deemed to be for
services primarily intended to result in the sale of Fund shares,  such fees are
deemed approved and may be paid under the Administration Plan. Accordingly,  the
Administration  Plan has been  approved  and will be  operated  pursuant to Rule
12b-1  under the 1940 Act.  Such plan  shall  continue  in effect as long as the
Board of Trustees, including a majority of the Qualified Trustees,  specifically
approves the plan at least annually.

Distribution Plans and Shareholder Servicing Arrangements for Investor Shares

         Investor  A Shares.  The Trust has  adopted  an  Amended  and  Restated
Shareholder  Servicing and Distribution Plan (the "Investor A Plan") pursuant to
Rule  12b-1  under the 1940 Act with  respect  to the  Investor  A Shares of the
Funds.  The Investor A Plan provides that each Fund may pay the  Distributor  or
banks,  broker/dealers or other financial  institutions that offer shares of the
Fund and that have entered into a Sales Support  Agreement with the  Distributor
("Selling Agents") or a Shareholder  Servicing Agreement with Nations Fund Trust
("Servicing  Agents"), up to 0.10% (on an annualized basis) of the average daily
net asset value of Investor A Shares of the Money  Market  Funds and up to 0.25%
(on an  annualized  basis) of the average daily net asset value of the Non-Money
Market Funds.

         Such payments may be made to (i) the Distributor for  reimbursements of
distribution-related  expenses actually incurred by the Distributor,  including,
but not limited to,  expenses  of  organizing  and  conducting  sales  seminars,
printing  of  prospectuses   and  statements  of  additional   information  (and
supplements   thereto)  and  reports  for  other  than  existing   shareholders,
preparation and  distribution of advertising  material and sales  literature and
costs of  administering  the Investor A Plan,  or (ii) Selling  Agents that have
entered into a Sales Support  Agreement with the Distributor for providing sales
support  assistance in connection with the sale of Investor A Shares.  The sales
support  assistance  provided by a Selling Agent under a Sales Support Agreement
may include forwarding sales literature and advertising provided by Nations Fund
Trust or the  Distributor  to their  customers  and  providing  such other sales
support  assistance  as may be requested by the  Distributor  from time to time.
Currently, substantially all fees paid by the Money Market Funds pursuant to the
Investor  A Plan are paid to  compensate  Selling  Agents  for  providing  sales
support

                                       92

<PAGE>

services,  with any remaining amounts being used by the Distributor to partially
defray other expenses  incurred by the  Distributor in  distributing  Investor A
Shares.

         Payments  under  the  Investor  A Plan by each  Non-Money  Market  Fund
(except the  Short-Term  Income Fund and the Short-Term  Municipal  Income Fund)
also may be made to  Servicing  Agents  that  have  entered  into a  Shareholder
Servicing  Agreement with Nations Fund Trust for providing  shareholder  support
services  to their  Customers  which hold of record or  beneficially  Investor A
Shares of a Non-Money Market Fund. Such shareholder support services provided by
Servicing  Agents to holders of  Investor A Shares of such Funds may include (i)
aggregating  and  processing  purchase  and  redemption  requests for Investor A
Shares  from  their  Customers  and  transmitting   promptly  net  purchase  and
redemption  orders to our  distributor or transfer  agent;  (ii) providing their
Customers with a service that invests the assets of their accounts in Investor A
Shares pursuant to specific or  pre-authorized  instructions;  (iii)  processing
dividend and  distribution  payments  from Nations Fund Trust on behalf of their
Customers;  (iv) providing  information  periodically to their Customers showing
their  positions  in  Investor A Shares;  (v)  arranging  for bank  wires;  (vi)
responding to their Customers' inquiries concerning their investment in Investor
A Shares;  (vii)  providing  subaccounting  with  respect  to  Investor A Shares
beneficially  owned by their  Customers or the  information  to us necessary for
subaccounting;  (viii) if required by law, forwarding shareholder communications
from  Nations  Fund Trust  (such as  proxies,  shareholder  reports,  annual and
semi-annual financial statements and dividend,  distribution and tax notices) to
their Customers; (ix) forwarding to their Customers proxy statements and proxies
containing any proposals  regarding the  Shareholder  Servicing  Agreement;  (x)
providing general  shareholder  liaison services;  and (xi) providing such other
similar services as Nations Fund Trust may reasonably  request to the extent the
Selling  Agent  is  permitted  to do so  under  applicable  statutes,  rules  or
regulations.  The  Money  Market  Funds,  the  Short-Term  Income  Fund  and the
Short-Term  Municipal  Income Fund may not pay for personal  services and/or the
maintenance of shareholder  accounts, as such terms are interpreted by the NASD,
under the Investor A Plan.

         Expenses incurred by the Distributor pursuant to the Investor A Plan in
any given  year may  exceed the sum of the fees  received  under the  Investor A
Plan.  Any such excess may be  recovered by the  Distributor  in future years so
long as the Investor A Plan is in effect. If the Investor A Plan were terminated
or not  continued,  a Fund  would  not be  contractually  obligated  to pay  the
Distributor  for any  expenses  not  previously  reimbursed  by the  Fund.  Fees
received by the Distributor  pursuant to the Investor A Plan will not be used to
pay any interest expenses,  carrying charges or other financing costs (except to
the extent  permitted  by the SEC) and will not be used to pay any  general  and
administrative expenses of the Distributor.

         In addition,  the Trust has adopted an Amended and Restated Shareholder
Servicing  Plan for the  Investor  A  Shares  of the  Money  Market  Funds,  the
Short-Term Income Fund and the Short-Term Municipal Income Fund (the "Investor A
Servicing Plan").  Pursuant to the Investor A Servicing Plan, each such Fund may
pay banks,

                                       93

<PAGE>

broker/dealers  or  other  financial  institutions  that  have  entered  into  a
Shareholder  Servicing Agreement with the Trust ("Servicing Agents") up to 0.25%
(on an annualized  basis) of the average daily net asset value of the Investor A
Shares of each Fund for providing shareholder support services. Such shareholder
support  services  provided by Servicing  Agents may include  those  shareholder
support services  discussed above with respect to the Investor A Plan. Fees paid
pursuant to the Investor A Servicing Plan are calculated daily and paid monthly.

         During the fiscal period ended March 31, 1996, the Distributor received
the following  amounts from Rule 12b-1 fees,  front end sales load fees and CDSC
fees  in  connection  with  Investor  A  Shares:   $265,899,   $12,473  and  $0,
respectively.  Of  these  amounts,  the  Distributor  retained  $0,  $0 and  $0,
respectively, and paid the balance to selling dealers.

         Investor C Shares of the  Non-Money  Market Funds and Investor B Shares
of the Money Market Funds.  As stated in the  Prospectuses,  the Trustees of the
Trust have approved an Amended and Restated Distribution Plan (the "Investor C/B
Plan") in  accordance  with Rule  12b-1  under the 1940 Act for the  Investor  C
Shares of the  Non-Money  Market  Funds and  Investor  B Shares of Money  Market
Funds.  Pursuant to the Investor C/B Plan,  a Fund may pay the  Distributor  for
certain  expenses that are incurred in connection  with sales support  services.
Payments  under the Investor C/B Plan will be calculated  daily and paid monthly
at a rate  set from  time to time by the  Board of  Trustees  provided  that the
annual  rate may not  exceed  0.75% of the  average  daily  net  asset  value of
Investor C Shares of a Non-Money  Market Fund and 0.10% of the average daily net
asset  value of  Investor  B Shares  of a Money  Market  Fund.  Payments  to the
Distributor  pursuant to the  Investor  C/B Plan will be used (i) to  compensate
banks,  other  financial  institutions or a securities  broker/dealer  that have
entered into a Sales Support Agreement with the Distributor  ("Selling  Agents")
for providing  sales support  assistance  relating to Investor Shares covered by
the Plan,  (ii) for  promotional  activities  intended  to result in the sale of
Investor Shares covered by the Plan such as to pay for the preparation, printing
and distribution of prospectuses to other than current  shareholders,  and (iii)
to compensate  Selling Agents for providing sales support  services with respect
to their Customers who are, from time to time,  beneficial and record holders of
Investor  Shares  covered by the Plan.  Currently,  substantially  all fees paid
pursuant to the  Investor  C/B Plan are paid to  compensate  Selling  Agents for
providing  the services  described in (i) and (iii)  above,  with any  remaining
amounts  being  used by the  Distributor  to  partially  defray  other  expenses
incurred by the  Distributor  in  distributing  Investor C Shares of a Non-Money
Market Fund and Investor B Shares of a Money Market Fund.  Fees  received by the
Distributor  pursuant  to the  Investor  C/B  Plan  will  not be used to pay any
interest  expenses,  carrying  charges or other  financing  costs (except to the
extent  permitted  by the  SEC)  and  will  not be used to pay any  general  and
administrative expenses of the Distributor.

         Pursuant to the Investor C/B Plan, the Distributor may enter into Sales
Support  Agreements with Selling Agents for providing sales support  services to
their  Customers who are the record or beneficial  owners of Investor C/B Shares
of a Non-Money

                                       94

<PAGE>

Market Fund and Investor B Shares of a Money Market  Fund.  Such Selling  Agents
will be  compensated  at the annual rate of up to 0.75% of the average daily net
asset value of the Investor C Shares of the Non-Money  Market  Funds,  and up to
0.10% of the average daily net asset value of the Investor B Shares of the Money
Market Funds held of record or beneficially by such Customers. The sales support
services  provided  by  Selling  Agents  may  include   providing   distribution
assistance and promotional  activities intended to result in the sales of shares
such as paying for the preparation, printing and distribution of prospectuses to
other than current shareholders. Fees paid pursuant to the Investor C/B Plan are
accrued daily and paid monthly,  and are charged as expenses of Shares of a Fund
as accrued.  Expenses  incurred by the Distributor  pursuant to the Investor C/B
Plan in any  given  year may  exceed  the sum of the  fees  received  under  the
Investor C/B Plan and payments  received  pursuant to contingent  deferred sales
charges.  Any such excess may be recovered by the Distributor in future years so
long as the  Investor  C/B Plan is in  effect.  If the  Investor  C/B Plan  were
terminated or not continued, a Fund would not be contractually  obligated to pay
the  Distributor  for any  expenses  not  previously  reimbursed  by the Fund or
recovered through contingent deferred sales charges.

         In  addition,  the  Trustees  have  approved  an Amended  and  Restated
Shareholder  Servicing  Plan with respect to Investor C Shares of the  Non-Money
Market Funds and Investor B Shares of the Money Market Funds (the  "Investor C/B
Servicing Plan"). Pursuant to its Investor C/B Servicing Plan, each Fund may pay
banks,  broker/dealers or other financial  institutions that have entered into a
Shareholder  Servicing Agreement with the Trust ("Servicing Agents") for certain
expenses  that  are  incurred  by  the  Servicing   Agents  in  connection  with
shareholder support services that are provided by the Servicing Agents. Payments
under a Fund's  Investor C/B Servicing  Plan will be  calculated  daily and paid
monthly at a rate set from time to time by the Board of Trustees,  provided that
the annual  rate may not exceed  0.25% of the  average  daily net asset value of
each Fund's  Investor C or Investor B Shares,  as  appropriate.  The shareholder
services  provided  by the  Servicing  Agents may include  (i)  aggregating  and
processing  purchase and redemption  requests for Investor Shares covered by the
Plan from Customers and transmitting promptly net purchase and redemption orders
to our  distributor or transfer agent;  (ii) providing  Customers with a service
that invests the assets of their accounts in Investor Shares covered by the Plan
pursuant to specific or pre-authorized  instructions;  (iii) processing dividend
and distribution payments from the Trust on behalf of Customers;  (iv) providing
information periodically to Customers showing their positions in Investor Shares
covered by the Plan; (v) arranging for bank wires; (vi) responding to Customers'
inquiries  concerning  their  investment in Investor Shares covered by the Plan;
(vii)  providing  subaccounting  with respect to Investor  Shares covered by the
Plan  beneficially  owned  by  Customers  or  providing  the  information  to us
necessary for subaccounting;  (viii) if required by law, forwarding  shareholder
communications from the Trust (such as proxies,  shareholder reports, annual and
semi-annual financial statements and dividend,  distribution and tax notices) to
Customers;  (ix) forwarding to Customers proxy statements and proxies containing
any  proposals  regarding the  Shareholder  Servicing  Agreement;  (x) providing
general

                                       95

<PAGE>

shareholder liaison services;  and (xi) providing such other similar services as
the Trust may reasonably  request to the extent the Servicing Agent is permitted
to do so under applicable statutes, rules or regulations.

         During the fiscal period ended March 31, 1996, the Distributor received
the following  amounts from Rule 12b-1 fees,  front end sales load fees and CDSC
fees in  connection  with  Investor  C Shares  of the  Non-Money  Market  Funds:
$226,162.84,  $0 and $5,086,  respectively.  Of these amounts,  the  Distributor
retained  $15,749.93,  $0 and $1,394.24,  respectively,  and paid the balance to
selling dealers.

         Daily Shares of the Money Market  Funds.  The Trustees  have approved a
Distribution Plan (the "Daily  Distribution  Plan") with respect to Daily Shares
of the Money  Market  Funds.  Pursuant to the Daily  Distribution  Plan, a Money
Market Fund may  compensate or reimburse the  Distributor  for any activities or
expenses  primarily  intended  to result in the sale of a Fund's  Daily  Shares,
including for sales related services provided by banks,  broker/dealers or other
financial institutions that have entered into a Sales Support Agreement relating
to the Daily Shares with the Distributor  ("Selling  Agents").  Payments under a
Fund's Daily  Distribution  Plan will be calculated  daily and paid monthly at a
rate or rates set from time to time by the Board of Trustees  provided  that the
annual rate may not exceed  0.45% of the  average  daily net asset value of each
Money Market Fund's Daily Shares.

         The fees payable under the Daily  Distribution  Plan are used primarily
to compensate or reimburse the Distributor for distribution services provided by
it, and related  expenses  incurred,  including  payments by the  Distributor to
compensate or reimburse Selling Agents, for sales support services provided, and
related  expenses  incurred,  by such Selling  Agents.  Payments under the Daily
Distribution  Plan  may be  made  with  respect  to  preparation,  printing  and
distribution of prospectuses,  sales literature and advertising materials by the
Distributor or, as applicable,  Selling Agents,  attributable to distribution or
sales support activities,  respectively,  commissions, incentive compensation or
other compensation to, and expenses of, account executives or other employees of
the Distributor or Selling Agents, attributable to distribution or sales support
activities,  respectively; overhead and other office expenses of the Distributor
relating to the foregoing  (which may be calculated as a carrying  charge in the
Distributor's or Selling Agents' unreimbursed expenses),  incurred in connection
with  distribution  or sales support  activities.  The overhead and other office
expenses referenced above may include,  without limitation,  (i) the expenses of
operating the  Distributor's  or Selling  Agents' offices in connection with the
sale of Fund shares,  including lease costs,  the salaries and employee  benefit
costs of  administrative,  operations  and  support  personnel,  utility  costs,
communication costs and the costs of stationery and supplies,  (ii) the costs of
client  sales  seminars and travel  related to  distribution  and sales  support
activities,  and (iii) other expenses relating to distribution and sales support
activities.

         In addition,  the Trustees have approved a Shareholder  Servicing  Plan
with respect to Daily  Shares of the Money  Market  Funds (the "Daily  Servicing
Plan").

                                       96

<PAGE>

Pursuant to the Daily Servicing Plan, a Fund may compensate or reimburse  banks,
broker/dealers  or  other  financial  institutions  that  have  entered  into  a
Shareholder  Servicing Agreement with the Trust ("Servicing Agents") for certain
activities or expenses of the Servicing  Agents in connection  with  shareholder
services that are provided by the  Servicing  Agents.  Payments  under the Daily
Servicing Plan will be calculated  daily and paid monthly at a rate or rates set
from time to time by the Board of  Trustees,  provided  that the annual rate may
not exceed 0.25% of the average daily net asset value of the Daily Shares of the
Money Market Funds.

         The fees payable under the Daily  Servicing  Plan are used primarily to
compensate or reimburse Servicing Agents for shareholder services provided,  and
related expenses incurred,  by such Servicing Agents.  The shareholder  services
provided  by  Servicing  Agents may  include:  (i)  aggregating  and  processing
purchase  and  redemption  requests  for such Daily  Shares from  Customers  and
transmitting  promptly net purchase and redemption  orders to the Distributor or
Transfer Agent; (ii) providing  Customers with a service that invests the assets
of their  accounts in such Daily Shares  pursuant to specific or  pre-authorized
instructions; (iii) processing dividend and distribution payments from the Trust
on behalf of Customers;  (iv) providing  information  periodically  to Customers
showing their positions in such Daily Shares; (v) arranging for bank wires; (vi)
responding to Customers'  inquiries  concerning  their  investment in such Daily
Shares;  (vii)  providing  sub-accounting  with  respect  to such  Daily  Shares
beneficially owned by Customers or providing the information to us necessary for
sub-accounting; (viii) if required by law, forwarding shareholder communications
from the Trust (such as proxies,  shareholder  reports,  annual and  semi-annual
financial  statements and dividend,  distribution and tax notices) to Customers;
(ix)  forwarding  to  Customers  proxy  statements  and proxies  containing  any
proposals  regarding  the  Daily  Servicing  Plan  or  related  agreements;  (x)
providing general  shareholder  liaison services;  and (xi) providing such other
similar  services  as the  Trust  may  reasonably  request  to the  extent  such
Servicing  Agent is  permitted  to do so  under  applicable  statutes,  rules or
regulations.

         The fees payable under the Daily  Distribution Plan and Daily Servicing
Plan (together, the "Daily Plans") are treated by the Funds as an expense in the
year they are accrued. At any given time, a Selling Agent and/or Servicing Agent
may  incur  expenses  in  connection  with  services  provided  pursuant  to its
agreements with the Distributor  under the Daily Plans which exceed the total of
(i)  the  payments  made to the  Selling  Agents  and  Servicing  Agents  by the
Distributor  or Nations Fund and  reimbursed  by the Fund  pursuant to the Daily
Plans,  and (ii) the proceeds of contingent  deferred  sales charges paid to the
Distributor  and reallowed to the Selling  Agent,  upon the  redemption of their
Customers'  Daily  Shares.  Any such excess  expenses may be recovered in future
years, so long as the Daily Plans are in effect. Because there is no requirement
under the Daily Plans that the  Distributor  be paid or the  Selling  Agents and
Servicing  Agents be  compensated  or reimbursed  for all their  expenses or any
requirement  that the Daily Plans be  continued  from year to year,  such excess
amount,  if any, does not  constitute a liability to a Fund or the  Distributor.
Although there is no legal  obligation for the Fund to pay expenses  incurred by
the  Distributor,  a Selling

                                       97

<PAGE>

Agent  or a  Servicing  Agent  in  excess  of  payments  previously  made to the
Distributor  under the Daily Plans or in  connection  with  contingent  deferred
sales charges,  if for any reason the Daily Plans are  terminated,  the Trustees
will consider at that time the manner in which to treat such expenses.

         During the fiscal period ended March 31, 1996, the Distributor received
the following amount from Rule 12b-1 fees in connection with Daily Shares of the
Money Market Funds: $2, all of which was paid to selling dealers.

         Investor  N Shares  of the  Non-Money  Market  Funds.  As stated in the
Prospectuses  for the  Investor  N Shares of the  Non-Money  Market  Funds,  the
Trustees have approved a Distribution Plan (the "Investor N Distribution  Plan")
with respect to Investor N Shares of the Non-Money Market Funds. Pursuant to the
Investor N Distribution Plan, a Fund may compensate or reimburse the Distributor
for any activities or expenses  primarily  intended to result in the sale of the
Fund's  Investor N Shares,  including  for sales  related  services  provided by
banks,  broker/dealers or other financial  institutions that have entered into a
Sales Support  Agreement  relating to the Investor N Shares with the Distributor
("Selling Agents"). Payments under a Fund's Investor N Distribution Plan will be
calculated  daily and paid  monthly  at a rate or rates set from time to time by
the Board of Trustees  provided that the annual rate may not exceed 0.75% of the
average daily net asset value of each Non-Money Market Fund's Investor N Shares.

         The fees  payable  under  the  Investor  N  Distribution  Plan are used
primarily to compensate or reimburse the Distributor for  distribution  services
provided  by it,  and  related  expenses  incurred,  including  payments  by the
Distributor  to  compensate  or  reimburse  Selling  Agents,  for sales  support
services  provided,  and related  expenses  incurred,  by such  Selling  Agents.
Payments  under the  Investor N  Distribution  Plan may be made with  respect to
preparation,  printing and  distribution of  prospectuses,  sales literature and
advertising  materials by the  Distributor  or, as applicable,  Selling  Agents,
attributable  to  distribution  or  sales  support   activities,   respectively,
commissions,  incentive  compensation or other compensation to, and expenses of,
account  executives or other  employees of the  Distributor  or Selling  Agents,
attributable to distribution or sales support activities, respectively; overhead
and other office  expenses of the Distributor  relating to the foregoing  (which
may be calculated as a carrying charge in the  Distributor's  or Selling Agents'
unreimbursed  expenses),  incurred  in  connection  with  distribution  or sales
support activities.  The overhead and other office expenses referenced above may
include, without limitation,  (i) the expenses of operating the Distributor's or
Selling Agents'  offices in connection  with the sale of Fund shares,  including
lease  costs,  the  salaries  and  employee  benefit  costs  of  administrative,
operations and support  personnel,  utility costs,  communication  costs and the
costs of stationery  and supplies,  (ii) the costs of client sales  seminars and
travel related to  distribution  and sales support  activities,  and (iii) other
expenses relating to distribution and sales support activities.

                                       98

<PAGE>

         In addition,  the Trustees have approved a Shareholder  Servicing  Plan
with respect to Investor N Shares of the  Non-Money  Market Funds and Investor C
Shares of the Money Market Funds) the "Investor N/C Servicing  Plan").  Pursuant
to its Investor N/C Servicing  Plan, a Fund may  compensate or reimburse  banks,
broker/dealers  or  other  financial  institutions  that  have  entered  into  a
Shareholder  Servicing Agreement with the Trust ("Servicing Agents") for certain
activities or expenses of the Servicing  Agents in connection  with  shareholder
services  that are provided by the  Servicing  Agents.  Payments  under a Fund's
Investor N/C Servicing Plan will be calculated  daily and paid monthly at a rate
or rates  set from  time to time by the  Board of  Trustees,  provided  that the
annual  rate may not exceed  0.25% of the  average  daily net asset value of the
Fund's Investor N or C Shares, as appropriate.

         The  fees  payable  under  the  Investor  N/C  Servicing  Plan are used
primarily to compensate or reimburse  Servicing Agents for shareholder  services
provided,   and  related  expenses  incurred,  by  such  Servicing  Agents.  The
shareholder  services provided by Servicing Agents may include:  (i) aggregating
and processing purchase and redemption requests for Investor N and C Shares from
Customers and  transmitting  promptly net purchase and redemption  orders to the
Distributor  or Transfer  Agent;  (ii)  providing  Customers with a service that
invests  the assets of their  accounts  in  Investor N or C Shares  pursuant  to
specific  or  pre-authorized   instructions;   (iii)  processing   dividend  and
distribution  payments  from the Trust on behalf of  Customers;  (iv)  providing
information periodically to Customers showing their positions in Investor N or C
Shares;  (v) arranging for bank wires;  (vi) responding to Customers'  inquiries
concerning  their  investment  in  Investor  N  or  C  Shares;  (vii)  providing
sub-accounting with respect to Investor C Shares beneficially owned by Customers
or providing  the  information  to us necessary  for  sub-accounting;  (viii) if
required by law, forwarding  shareholder  communications from the Trust (such as
proxies,  shareholder reports,  annual and semi-annual  financial statements and
dividend,  distribution  and tax  notices)  to  Customers;  (ix)  forwarding  to
Customers proxy  statements and proxies  containing any proposals  regarding the
Investor N or C Servicing  Plan or related  agreements;  (x)  providing  general
shareholder liaison services;  and (xi) providing such other similar services as
the Trust may reasonably request to the extent such Servicing Agent is permitted
to do so under applicable statutes, rules or regulations.

         The fees payable  under the Investor C  Distribution  Plan and Investor
N/C Servicing Plan (together, the "Investor N/C Plans") are treated by the Funds
as an expense in the year they are accrued.  At any given time, a Selling  Agent
and/or  Servicing Agent may incur expenses in connection with services  provided
pursuant to its  agreements  with the  Distributor  under the Investor N/C Plans
which  exceed  the total of (i) the  payments  made to the  Selling  Agents  and
Servicing  Agents by the  Distributor or Nations Fund and reimbursed by the Fund
pursuant to the Investor N/C Plans, and (ii) the proceeds of contingent deferred
sales charges paid to the Distributor  and reallowed to the Selling Agent,  upon
the redemption of their Customers'  Investor N Shares.  Any such excess expenses
may be  recovered  in future  years,  so long as the  Investor  N/C Plans are in
effect.

                                       99

<PAGE>

         Because there is no  requirement  under the Investor N/C Plans that the
Distributor be paid or the Selling Agents and Servicing Agents be compensated or
reimbursed for all their expenses or any requirement that the Investor N/C Plans
be continued from year to year, such excess amount,  if any, does not constitute
a liability to a Fund or the Distributor.  Although there is no legal obligation
for the Fund to pay expenses  incurred by the Distributor,  a Selling Agent or a
Servicing Agent in excess of payments  previously made to the Distributor  under
the Investor N/C Plans or in connection with contingent  deferred sales charges,
if for any reason the  Investor  N/C Plans are  terminated,  the  Trustees  will
consider at that time and manner in which to treat such expenses.

         During the fiscal period ended March 31, 1996, the Distributor received
the  following  amounts  from Rule 12b-1 fees and CDSC fees in  connection  with
Investor  N  Shares  of the  Non-Money  Market  Funds:  $939,081  and  $558,076,
respectively.   Of  these  amounts,   the  Distributor  retained  $  0  and  $0,
respectively, and paid the balance to selling dealers.

         Information  Applicable  to Investor A,  Investor B, Investor C Shares,
Daily and Investor N Shares. The Investor A Plan, the Investor A Servicing Plan,
the Investor C/B Plan, the Investor C/B Servicing  Plan, the Investor C Plan and
the Investor N/C Servicing Plan (each a "Plan" and collectively the "Plans") may
only be used for the purposes  specified  above and as stated in each such Plan.
Compensation  payable  to Selling  Agents or  Servicing  Agents for  shareholder
support  services under the Investor A Plan, the Investor A Servicing  Plan, the
Investor C/B Servicing  Plan and the Investor N/C Servicing  Plan is subject to,
among other  things,  the  National  Association  of  Securities  Dealers,  Inc.
("NASD") Rules of Fair Practice  governing  receipt by NASD members of servicing
fees from registered  investment  companies (the "NASD Service Fee Rule"), which
became  effective  on July 7,  1993.  Such  compensation  shall only be paid for
services determined to be permissible under the NASD Service Fee Rule.

         Each Plan  requires  the  officers of the Trust to provide the Board of
Trustees  at least  quarterly  with a  written  report of the  amounts  expended
pursuant to the Plan and the purposes for which such expenditures were made. The
Board of Trustees  reviews these reports in connection with their decisions with
respect to the Plans.

         As required by Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act, each Plan was approved by
the  Board  of  Trustees,  including  a  majority  of the  trustees  who are not
"interested  persons"  (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Trust and who have no
direct or indirect  financial  interest in the  operation  of the Plan or in any
agreements  related to the Plan  ("Qualified  Trustees") on June 24, 1992,  with
respect to the Investor A Shares of each Fund except the Intermediate  Municipal
Bond Fund and the Tennessee  Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund; on March 19, 1992
with respect to the Investor C Shares (formerly  Investor B Shares) of the Value
Fund,   Short-Intermediate  Government  Fund,  Municipal  Income  Fund,  Georgia
Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund,  Maryland  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund,
South  Carolina  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond  Fund

                                      100

<PAGE>

and Virginia Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund; on June 24, 1992 with respect to
the Investor C Shares  (formerly  Investor B Shares) of the Capital Growth Fund,
Emerging Growth Fund, Balanced Assets Fund, Short-Term Income Fund,  Diversified
Income Fund,  Strategic Fixed Income Fund, Florida  Intermediate  Municipal Bond
Fund, and North Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund and Texas Intermediate
Municipal  Bond Fund;  on February 3, 1993,  with  respect to the Investor A and
Investor C Shares  (formerly  Investor B Shares) of the  Intermediate  Municipal
Bond Fund and the  Tennessee  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund; on February 3,
1993, with respect to the Investor B Shares of the Government  Money Market Fund
and the Tax Exempt Fund; and on February 3, 1993, with respect to the Investor N
Shares (formerly  Investor C Shares) of each Non-Money Market Fund. On August 4,
1993,  the Board of Trustees  approved  the  Investor  N/C  Servicing  Plan with
respect to the Money Market  Funds.  On February 2, 1994,  the Board of Trustees
approved  the  Primary B Servicing  Plan,  Investor A Plan,  Investor  C/B Plan,
Investor C/B Servicing  Plan,  Investor C Plan and Investor N/C  Servicing  Plan
with respect to the Disciplined Equity Fund.

         In approving  the Plans in  accordance  with the  requirements  of Rule
12b-1,  the Trustees  considered  various factors and determined that there is a
reasonable  likelihood  that each Plan will benefit the  respective  Investor A,
Investor  B,  Investor C Shares or  Investor  N Shares  and the  holders of such
shares. The Plans were approved by the Investor A Shares of the Government Money
Market Fund, Tax Exempt Fund,  Value Fund,  Short-Intermediate  Government Fund,
Municipal Income Fund, Georgia Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund, South Carolina
Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and Virginia Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund
on September 22, 1992. The Plans  applicable to Investor A and Investor C Shares
(formerly  Investor B Shares) of the Capital Growth Fund,  Emerging Growth Fund,
Balanced Assets Fund, Short-Term Income Fund, Diversified Income Fund, Strategic
Fixed Income Fund, North Carolina Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund, and Florida
Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund were approved by the initial  shareholders  of
each such Fund's  Investor A Shares and  Investor C Shares and will be submitted
to each Fund's  relevant  shareholders  for approval at a later date.  The Plans
applicable  to the Investor C Shares  (formerly  Investor B Shares) of the Value
Fund,   Short-Intermediate  Government  Fund,  Municipal  Income  Fund,  Georgia
Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund,  Maryland  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund,
South  Carolina  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond  Fund and  Virginia  Intermediate
Municipal  Bond Fund were approved by each such Fund's  initial  shareholder  of
Investor C Shares and by each Fund's  shareholders  on September  22, 1992.  The
Plans  applicable to the Investor A Shares of the  Intermediate  Municipal  Bond
Fund, the Texas Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and the Tennessee Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund were approved by such Funds' initial shareholder of Investor
A Shares.  The Plans  applicable to the Investor N Shares  (formerly  Investor C
Shares) of each  Non-Money  Market Fund were  approved  by each  Fund's  initial
shareholder of Investor N Shares.

         All Plans  shall  continue  in effect  as long as such  continuance  is
specifically  approved at least  annually by the Board of Trustees,  including a
majority of  qualified  Trustees.  On  November  6, 1993,  the Board of Trustees
considered the Plans for all

                                      101

<PAGE>

Funds  (except the Special  Equity Fund) and voted to continue such Plans for an
additional one-year period.

         The Investor A Plan,  the Investor C/B Plan and the Investor C Plan may
be  terminated  with respect to Investor A, Investor C/B or Investor C Shares by
vote of a majority of the  Qualified  Trustees,  or by vote of a majority of the
holders of a Fund's  outstanding  voting  securities of the Investor A, Investor
C/B or  Investor  C  Shares.  Any  change  in such a Plan  that  would  increase
materially  the  distribution  expenses  paid by the  Investor  A,  Investor  B,
Investor C Shares or Investor N Shares,  as  appropriate,  requires  shareholder
approval;  otherwise,  each Plan may be amended  by the  trustees,  including  a
majority of the Qualified  Trustees,  by vote cast in person at a meeting called
for the purpose of voting upon such  amendment.  The Investor A Servicing  Plan,
the Investor C/B  Servicing  Plan and the  Investor  N/C  Servicing  Plan may be
terminated by a vote of a majority of the Qualified Trustees.  As long as a Plan
is in effect, the selection or nomination of the Qualified Trustees is committed
to the discretion of the Qualified Trustees.

         Conflict of interest  restrictions  may apply to the receipt by Selling
and/or Servicing Agents of compensation from Nations Fund in connection with the
investment of fiduciary  assets in Investor  Shares.  Selling  and/or  Servicing
Agents,  including  banks  regulated by the  Comptroller  of the  Currency,  the
Federal  Reserve  Board,  or the  Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation,  and
investment  advisers and other money managers subject to the jurisdiction of the
SEC, the  Department of Labor,  or state  securities  commissions,  are urged to
consult their legal advisers before investing such assets in Investor Shares.

         Fees Paid Pursuant to Shareholder Servicing/Distribution Plans
                                Investor A Shares

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     
                                                                             
  FUND                                                                     
                                                             Net                     Net
                                                       Fees Paid (12b-1     Fees Paid (Shareholder                              Net
                                                          Component)         Servicing Component)          Fees Paid
                                                      Period ended 3/31/96   Period ended 3/31/96         FYE 11/30/95
<S>                                                      <C>                    <C>                        <C>    
Government Money Market Fund                             $16,455.40             $41,138.51                 $66,320
Tax Exempt Fund                                           10,736.30              96,941.24                 325,609
Value Fund                                                42,080.39                   0                    100,864
Capital Growth Fund                                       14,002.47                   0                     33,996
Emerging Growth Fund                                       5,258.18                   0                     10,934
Disciplined Equity Fund                                    1,260.99                   0                        926
Equity Index Fund                                              0.00                   0                          3
Balanced Assets Fund                                       4,779.67                   0                     12,281
</TABLE>

                                      102

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     
                                                                             
  FUND                                                                     
                                                             Net                     Net
                                                       Fees Paid (12b-1     Fees Paid (Shareholder                              Net
                                                          Component)         Servicing Component)          Fees Paid
                                                      Period ended 3/31/96   Period ended 3/31/96         FYE 11/30/95
<S>                                                       <C>                         <C>                  <C>    
Short-Intermediate Government Fund                        40,480.00                   0                    134,526
Short-Term Income Fund                                     1,478.04                 507.60                   5,271
Diversified Income Fund                                   11,251.60                   0                     29,942
Strategic Fixed Income Fund                                4,469.96                   0                      4,577
Municipal Income Fund                                     18,008.35                   0                     51,257
Short-Term Municipal Income Fund                           1,946.00                 626.41                   4,237
Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                             920.48                   0                      1,714
Florida Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                   1,498.39                   0                      4,198
Georgia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                   5,919.11                   0                     20,573
Maryland Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                 13,895.07                   0                     42,880
North Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond  Fund           5,267.95                   0                     17,214
South Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund            9,734.75                   0                     31,815
Tennessee Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund                4,998.34                   0                     15,683
Texas Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                       534.24                   0                      1,638
Virginia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                 47,116.23                   0                    151,365
Florida Municipal Bond Fund                                1,248.67                   0                      3,021
Georgia Municipal Bond Fund                                    4.44                   0                         13
Maryland Municipal Bond Fund                                 672.03                   0                      1,205
North Carolina Municipal Bond Fund                           258.37                   0                      1,530
South Carolina Municipal Bond Fund                           822.50                   0                        850
Tennessee Municipal Bond Fund                                140.74                   0                        216
Texas Municipal Bond Fund                                    223.17                   0                        311
Virginia Municipal Bond Fund                                 437.02                   0                        810
</TABLE>

                                      103

<PAGE>

                    Fees Paid Pursuant to Distribution Plans

                   Investor C Shares - Non-Money Market Funds
                     Investor B Shares - Money Market Funds

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                          
  FUND                                                                                 
                                                                                       Net
                                                          Net                       Fees Paid
                                               Fees Paid (12b-1 Component)        (Shareholder                Net
                                                      Period ended             Servicing Component)        Fees Paid
                                                         3/31/96               Period ended 3/31/96       FYE 11/30/95
<S>                                                   <C>                          <C>                      <C>    
Government Money Market Fund                          $          0                 $ 44,849.32              $53,417
Tax Exempt Fund                                                  0                   90,151.60              107,280
Value Fund                                                5,473.54                    3,691.06               35,944
Capital Growth Fund                                       4,271.18                    2,880.17               29,156
Emerging Growth Fund                                      1,034.88                      696.27                6,801
Disciplined Equity Fund                                     375.04                      249.30                1,185
Equity Index Fund                                                0                           0                  N/A
Balanced Assets Fund                                      1,321.25                      898.11                8,359
Short-Intermediate Government Fund                       13,283.36                    7,730.30               70,814
Short-Term Income Fund                                    3,402.21                    3,905.80               24,650
Diversified Income Fund                                   4,406.98                    2,159.11               22,769
Strategic Fixed Income Fund                                 316.71                      189.92                  349
Municipal Income Fund                                     2,823.76                    1,386.55               19,872
Short-Term Municipal Income Fund                            865.61                    1,146.43                2,660
Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                            586.62                      434.35                  662
Florida Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                    290.06                      172.80                1,436
Georgia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                  2,613.10                    1,529.53               12,823
Maryland Intermediate  Municipal Bond                     2,972.66                    1,782.66               13,177
  Fund
North Carolina Intermediate Municipal                     1,435.87                      856.47                7,248
  Bond Fund
South Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond                5,767.95                    3,425.64               28,757
Fund
Tennessee Intermediate  Municipal                             2.41                        1.44                   11
  Bond Fund
Texas Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                      598.51                      356.82                2,216
Virginia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                 7,394.28                    4,374.82               38,399
Florida Municipal Bond Fund                                  56.22                       31.74                  182
Georgia Municipal Bond Fund                                  87.35                       43.25                  270
Maryland Municipal Bond Fund                                  3.03                        1.50                   17
North Carolina Municipal Bond Fund                            4.10                        2.55                  103
South Carolina Municipal Bond Fund                          562.09                      257.26                   27
Tennessee Municipal Bond Fund                                72.07                       31.45                  364
Texas Municipal Bond Fund                                    88.67                       43.88                   29
Virginia Municipal Bond Fund                                 54.24                       27.16                   61
</TABLE>

                                      104

<PAGE>


NOTE:    All fees paid under the Investor A and Investor C/B Shares Distribution
         Plans  were  accrued  as  payments  to  broker/dealers   and  financial
         institutions offering such shares to their customers.

                        Daily Shares - Money Market Funds

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        
                                                                         
                                                  Net                    Net Fees Paid
                                             Fees Paid (12b-1             (Shareholder
                                                Component)             Servicing Component)       FYE
                                            Period ended 3/31/96       Period ended 3/31/96     11/30/95
  FUND
<S>                                              <C>                       <C>                 <C>
Government Money Market Fund                     $ 1.23                    $  1.67                $ 4
Tax Exempt Fund                                    1.20                       1.46                  2
</TABLE>


                     Investor C Shares - Money Market Funds
                   Investor N Shares - Non-Money Market Funds

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    
                                                                                
                                                                 Net                Fees Paid 
                                                           Fees Paid (12b-1       (Shareholder                 Net
                                                              Component)         Servicing Component)        Fees Paid
                                                         Period ended 3/31/96    Period ended 3/31/96      FYE 11/30/95
  FUND
<S>                                                       <C>                       <C>                    <C>       
Government Money Market Fund                              $          0.00           $ 1,895.46             $    2,573
Tax Exempt Fund                                                      0.00            27,500.83                 43,328
Value Fund                                                     145,275.27            72,637.63                449,537
Capital Growth Fund                                            101,564.48            33,854.83                314,386
Emerging Growth Fund                                            82,069.51            27,356.50                232,800
Disciplined Equity Fund                                         43,585.75            14,528.58                 39,592
Nations Equity Index Fund                                            0.00                 0.00                 --
Balanced Assets Fund                                           110,015.94            55,007.97                421,921
Short-Intermediate Government Fund                              16,952.38            12,108.84                 70,600
Short-Term Income Fund                                           2,738.41             6,846.02                 38,981
Diversified Income Fund                                        149,179.97            74,589.98                538,683
Strategic Fixed Income Fund                                      3,421.99             2,138.74                 14,648
Municipal Income Fund                                           29,356.11            14,678.05                136,830
Short-Term Municipal Income Fund                                 3,998.28             9,995.69                 37,488
Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                                 1,239.10             1,239.10                  5,868
Florida Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                         3,717.78             3,717.78                 23,484
Georgia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                         6,838.88             6,838.88                 38,810
Maryland Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund                       3,761.25             3,761.25                 22,102
North Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond                       6,740.61             6,740.61                 34,834
  Fund
South Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond                       5,660.88             5,660.88                 30,676
  Fund
</TABLE>

                                      105

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    
                                                                                
                                                                 Net                Fees Paid 
                                                           Fees Paid (12b-1       (Shareholder                 Net
                                                              Component)         Servicing Component)        Fees Paid
                                                         Period ended 3/31/96    Period ended 3/31/96      FYE 11/30/95
  FUND
<S>                                                       <C>                       <C>                    <C>       
Tennessee Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund                   $  2,950.00          $  2,950.00              $  17,478
Texas Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                           2,467.32             2,467.32                 15,692
Virginia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund                       10,073.97            10,073.97                 55,284
Florida Municipal Bond Fund                                     41,713.29            20,856.65                174,654
Georgia Municipal Bond Fund                                     21,200.11            10,600.06                 84,678
Maryland Municipal Bond Fund                                    16,622.75             8,311.38                 52,328
North Carolina Municipal Bond Fund                              49,477.85            24,738.91                207,955
South Carolina Municipal Bond Fund                              21,418.47            10,709.23                 80,631
Tennessee Municipal Bond Fund                                   11,115.33             5,557.67                 46,226
Texas Municipal Bond Fund                                       20,606.45            10,303.22                 89,464
Virginia Municipal Bond Fund                                    27,318.78            13,659.39                111,655
</TABLE>

                                   DISTRIBUTOR

         Stephens Inc. (the "Distributor"),  serves as the principal underwriter
and distributor of the shares of the Funds. Pursuant to a distribution agreement
(the "Distribution Agreement"),  the Distributor,  as agent, sells shares of the
Funds on a continuous  basis and transmits  purchase and redemption  orders that
its receives to the Trust or the Transfer Agent.  Additionally,  the Distributor
has agreed to use  appropriate  efforts to solicit orders for the sale of shares
and to undertake such  advertising  and promotion as it believes  appropriate in
connection with such solicitation.  Pursuant to the Distribution Agreement,  the
Distributor,  at its own expense,  finances those activities which are primarily
intended  to  result  in the sale of shares  of the  Funds,  including,  but not
limited  to,  advertising,  compensation  of  underwriters,  dealers  and  sales
personnel, the printing of prospectuses to other than existing shareholders, and
the printing and mailing of sales literature.  The Distributor,  however, may be
reimbursed  for all or a portion of such  expenses to the extent  permitted by a
distribution  plan  adopted by the Trust  pursuant  to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940
Act.

         The  Distribution  Agreement will continue year to year as long as such
continuance is approved at least annually by (i) the Board of Trustees or a vote
of the  majority  (as  defined  in the  1940  Act)  of  the  outstanding  voting
securities  of a Fund and (ii) a majority of the trustees who are not parties to
the Distribution  Agreement or "interested  persons" of any such party by a vote
cast in person at a meeting called for such purpose. The Distribution  Agreement
is not assignable and is terminable with respect to a Fund, without penalty,  on
60 days' notice by the Board of Trustees,  the vote of a majority (as defined in
the  1940  Act)  of the  outstanding  voting  securities  of a  Fund,  or by the
Distributor.

                                      106

<PAGE>

                       INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANT AND REPORTS

         On November 28, 1992, the Board of Trustees  selected Price  Waterhouse
LLP,  with  offices  at 160  Federal  Street,  Boston,  MA  02110,  to  serve as
independent  accountant  to Nations  Fund Trust for the fiscal  years  beginning
December  1,  1992.   Certain   financial   information  which  appears  in  the
Prospectuses and the financial statements has been audited by the accountants.

         The audited financial statements and portfolio of investments contained
in the Annual  Report for the fiscal  period  ended March 31,  1996,  are hereby
incorporated  by reference in this SAI. The Annual  Reports will be sent free of
charge with this SAI to any shareholder who requests this SAI.



                                     COUNSEL

         Morrison & Foerster LLP, 2000  Pennsylvania  Avenue,  N.W., Suite 5500,
Washington, D.C. 20006-1812, is counsel to the Trust.



                      ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON PERFORMANCE

         From time to time,  the yield  and  total  return of a Fund's  Investor
Shares and Primary Shares may be quoted in advertisements,  shareholder reports,
and other communications to shareholders.  Performance  information is available
by calling  1-800-321-7854  with respect to Investor  Shares and  1-800-621-2192
with respect to Primary Shares.

Yield Calculations

         Money Market  Funds.  The "yield" and  "effective  yield" of Primary A,
Primary B,  Investor A,  Investor B,  Investor C and Daily  Shares of each Money
Market Fund are computed  separately as described in the Prospectuses  according
to formulas prescribed by the SEC. The standardized  seven-day yield is computed
by determining the net change,  exclusive of capital changes,  in the value of a
hypothetical  pre-existing  account in the  particular  Fund  involved  having a
balance of one share of the class or series  involved  at the  beginning  of the
period,  dividing the net change in account value by the value of the account at
the  beginning  of the base  period  to  obtain  the  base  period  return,  and
multiplying the base period return by (365/7). The net change in the value of an
account in each Fund  includes the value of  additional  shares  purchased  with
dividends from the original share,  and dividends  declared on both the original
share and any such  additional  shares;  and all fees,  other than  nonrecurring
account or sales charges, that are charged to shareholder accounts in proportion
to the length of the

                                      107

<PAGE>

base period and the Fund's  average  account  size.  The  capital  changes to be
excluded  from the  calculation  of the net change in account value are realized
gains and losses from the sale of securities  and  unrealized  appreciation  and
depreciation.  The effective annualized yield for a class or series of shares in
a  Fund  is  computed  by  compounding  the  unannualized   base  period  return
(calculated as above) by adding 1 to the base period return,  raising the sum to
a power equal to 365 divided by 7, and subtracting 1 from the result.

         In addition,  the  "tax-equivalent  yield" of the Primary A, Primary B,
Investor A,  Investor B,  Investor C and Daily  Shares of the Tax Exempt Fund is
computed  by: (a)  dividing the portion of the yield that is exempt from Federal
income tax by one minus a stated  Federal  income  tax rate;  and (b) adding the
figure  resulting  from (a) above to that portion,  if any, of the yield that is
not exempt from Federal income tax.

         The current yield for each class or series of shares may be obtained by
calling the Trust at the telephone number provided on the cover page.

                  Seven Day Yield For the Period Ended 3/31/96

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  Effective                     Tax
                                               Yield                              Yield            Tax          Equivalent
Nations Government                             Without          Effective         Without          Equivalent   Yield Without
Money Market Fund              Yield           Fee  Waivers     Yield             Fee Waivers      Yield        Fee Waivers
                               -----           ------------     ---------         -----------      -----------  -----------
<S>                            <C>             <C>              <C>               <C>              <C>          <C>               
Primary A Shares               4.97%           4.68%            5.09%             4.80%            N/A            N/A
Primary B Shares               4.72%           4.43%            4.83%             4.54%            N/A            N/A
Investor A Shares              4.62%           4.33%            4.72%             4.43%            N/A            N/A
Investor B Shares              4.72%           4.43%            4.83%             4.54%            N/A            N/A
Investor C Shares              4.72%           4.43%            4.83%             4.54%            N/A            N/A
Daily Shares                   4.39%           4.10%            4.48%             4.19%            N/A            N/A

Nations Tax Exempt
Fund

Primary A Shares               3.40%           3.13%            3.45%             3.18%            4.93%          4.54%
Primary B Shares               3.15%           2.88%            3.19%             2.92%            4.57%          4.17%
Investor A Shares              3.15%           2.88%            3.19%             2.92%            4.57%          4.17%
Investor B Shares              3.20%           2.93%            3.25%             2.98%            4.64%          4.25%
Investor C Shares              3.25%           2.98%            3.30%             3.03%            4.71%          4.32%
Daily Shares                   2.74%           2.47%            2.77%             2.50%            3.97%          3.58%
</TABLE>


         Non-Money Market Funds. Yield is calculated separately for the Investor
A, Investor C, Investor N, Primary A and Primary B Shares of a Non-Money  Market
Fund by dividing the net investment  income per share for a particular  class or
series of shares  (as  described  below)  earned  during a 30-day  period by the
maximum  offering  price per share on the last day of the period (for  Primary A
and Primary B Shares,  maximum  offering  price per share is the same as the net
asset  value per share) and  annualizing  the result on a  semi-annual  basis by
adding one to the quotient, raising the sum to the power of six, subtracting one
from the  result  and then  doubling  the

                                      108

<PAGE>

difference. For a class or series of shares in a Fund, net investment income per
share  earned  during the period is based on the average  daily number of shares
outstanding  during  the  period  entitled  to receive  dividends  and  includes
dividends and interest  earned during the period minus expenses  accrued for the
period, net of reimbursements. This calculation can be expressed as follows:

                           Yield = 2 [(a-b+ 1)6 - 1]
                                         cd

Where:          a =     dividends and interest earned during the period.

                b =     expenses accrued for the period (net of reimbursements).

                c =     the average  daily number of shares  outstanding
                        during the period  that were  entitled  to receive
                        dividends.

                d =     maximum offering price per share on the last day
                        of the period (again,  for Primary A and Primary B
                        Shares,  this is equivalent to net asset value per
                        share).

         For the purpose of determining net investment  income earned during the
period (variable- "a" in the formula), dividend income on equity securities held
by a Fund is  recognized  by accruing  1/360 of the stated  dividend rate of the
security each day that the security is in the  portfolio.  Each Fund  calculates
interest earned on any debt  obligations  held in its portfolio by computing the
yield to maturity of each obligation held by it based on the market value of the
obligation  (including  actual accrued interest) at the close of business on the
last  business  day of each month,  or, with  respect to  obligations  purchased
during the month, the purchase price (plus actual accrued interest) and dividing
the  result by 360 and  multiplying  the  quotient  by the  market  value of the
obligation  (including  actual  accrued  interest)  in  order to  determine  the
interest income on the obligation for each day of the subsequent  month that the
obligation is in the portfolio. For purposes of this calculation,  it is assumed
that each month  contains 30 days.  The  maturity of an  obligation  with a call
provision  is the next  call  date on which  the  obligation  reasonably  may be
expected  to be called or, if none,  the  maturity  date.  With  respect to debt
obligations  purchased at a discount or premium, the formula generally calls for
amortization  of the  discount or premium.  The  amortization  schedule  will be
adjusted  monthly  to  reflect  changes  in  the  market  values  of  such  debt
obligations.  The  Municipal  Income  Fund,  Short-Term  Municipal  Income Fund,
Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund, the State  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Funds
and the State  Municipal  Bond Funds  calculate  interest  gained on  tax-exempt
obligations  issued without  original issue discount and having a current market
discount by using the coupon rate of interest  instead of the yield to maturity.
In the case of  tax-exempt  obligations  that are  issued  with  original  issue
discount,  where the  discount  based on the current  market  value  exceeds the
then-remaining  portion of original issue discount, the yield to maturity is the
imputed rate based on the original issue discount calculation. Conversely, where
the  discount  based on the  current  market  value is less  than the  remaining
portion of the original  issue  discount,  the yield to maturity is based on the
market value.

                                      109

<PAGE>

         Expenses  accrued for the period  (variable "b" in the formula) include
recurring fees charged by Nations Fund to shareholder  accounts in proportion to
the length of the base period.  Undeclared earned income will be subtracted from
the maximum  offering  price per share (which for Primary A and Primary B Shares
is net asset value per share) (variable "d" in the formula).  Undeclared  earned
income is the net investment  income which,  at the end of the base period,  has
not  been  declared  as a  dividend,  but is  reasonably  expected  to be and is
declared as a dividend shortly  thereafter.  A Fund's maximum offering price per
share for purposes of the formula  includes the maximum  sales  charge,  if any,
imposed by the Fund, as reflected in the Fund's prospectus.

         The Funds may provide  additional yield  calculations in communications
(other than advertisements) to the holders of Investor A, Investor C or Investor
N  Shares.  These may be  calculated  based on the  Investor  A,  Investor  C or
Investor  N Shares'  net asset  values  per share  (rather  than  their  maximum
offering   prices)  on  the  last  day  of  the  period  covered  by  the  yield
computations.  That is, some communications  provided to the holders of Investor
A,  Investor  C  or  Investor  N  Shares  may  also  include   additional  yield
calculations  prepared  for the  holders of Primary A or Primary B Shares.  Such
additional  quotations,  therefore,  will not  reflect  the  effect of the sales
charges mentioned above.

         Investor A Shares Only. Based on the foregoing calculations, the yield,
taking into account fee waivers  and/or  expense  reimbursements,  and the yield
without fee waivers  and/or expense  reimbursements  for the 30-day period ended
March 31, 1996 were as follows:


                  Thirty Day Yield For The Period Ended 3/31/96

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                     Tax
                                                            Yield                 Tax                Equivalent
                                                            Without               Equivalent         Yield Without
                                        Yield               Fee Waivers           Yield              Fee Waivers
<S>                                     <C>                 <C>                    <C>               <C>
Short-Intermediate
Government Fund

Primary A Shares                          5.36%              5.15%                  N/A               N/A
Investor A Shares                         5.16%              4.92%                  N/A               N/A
Investor C Shares                         4.86%              4.17%                  N/A               N/A
Investor N Shares                         4.76%              4.17%                  N/A               N/A
Short-Term Income Fund

Primary A Shares                          5.60%              5.35%                  N/A               N/A
Investor A Shares                         5.40%              4.83%                  N/A               N/A
Investor C Shares                         5.25%              4.33%                  N/A               N/A
Investor N Shares                         5.25%              4.33%                  N/A               N/A
Diversified Income Fund

Primary A Shares                          7.00%              6.96%                   N/A              N/A
Investor A Shares                         6.75%              6.65%                   N/A              N/A

                                      110

<PAGE>

Investor C Shares                         6.49%              6.14%                   N/A              N/A
Investor N Shares                         6.24%              5.89%                   N/A              N/A
Strategic Fixed Income Fund

Primary A Shares                          5.56%              5.50%                   N/A              N/A
Investor A Shares                         5.35%              5.27%                   N/A              N/A
Investor C Shares                         5.05%              4.52%                   N/A              N/A
Investor N Shares                         4.90%              4.52%                   N/A              N/A
Nations Municipal Income Fund

Primary A Shares                          5.21%              4.96%                   7.55%            7.19%
Investor A Shares                         5.01%              4.71%                   7.26%            6.83%
Investor C Shares                         4.70%              4.20%                   6.81%            6.09%
Investor N Shares                         4.45%              3.95%                   6.45%            5.72%
Nations Short-Term Municipal
Income  Fund
- ------------

Primary A Shares                          3.80%              3.54%                   5.51%            5.13%
Investor A Shares                         3.60%              3.05%                   5.22%            4.42%
Investor C Shares                         3.45%              2.45%                   5.00%            3.55%
Investor N Shares                         3.45%              2.55%                   5.00%            3.70%
Nations Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.56%              4.30%                   6.61%            6.23%
Investor A Shares                         4.35%              4.05%                   6.30%            5.87%
Investor C Shares                         4.05%              3.30%                   5.87%            4.78%
Investor N Shares                         4.05%              3.30%                   5.87%            4.78%
Nations Florida Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.38%              4.19%                   6.35%            6.07%
Investor A Shares                         4.18%              3.95%                   6.06%            5.72%
Investor C Shares                         3.88%              3.20%                   5.62%            4.64%
Investor N Shares                         3.88%              3.20%                   5.62%            4.64%
Nations Georgia Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.36%              4.17%                   6.92%            6.62%
Investor A Shares                         4.16%              3.93%                   6.60%            6.24%
Investor C Shares                         3.85%              3.17%                   6.11%            5.03%
Investor N Shares                         3.85%              3.17%                   6.11%            5.03%

                                      111

<PAGE>

Nations Maryland Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.15%              3.96%                   6.48%            6.19%
Investor A Shares                         3.95%              3.72%                   6.17%            5.81%
Investor C Shares                         3.65%              2.97%                   5.70%            4.64%
Investor N Shares                         3.65%              2.97%                   5.70%            4.64%
Nations North Carolina
Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
- --------------------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.32%              4.16%                   6.97%            6.71%
Investor A Shares                         4.12%              3.87%                   6.65%            6.24%
Investor C Shares                         3.81%              3.11%                   6.15%            5.02%
Investor N Shares                         3.81%              3.11%                   6.15%            5.02%
Nations South Carolina
Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
- --------------------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.56%              4.36%                   7.35%            7.03%
Investor A Shares                         4.36%              4.12%                   7.03%            6.65%
Investor C Shares                         4.06%              3.37%                   6.55%            5.44%
Investor N Shares                         4.06%              3.37%                   6.55%            5.44%
Nations Tennessee Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.35%              4.19%                   6.90%            6.65%
Investor A Shares                         4.15%              3.90%                   6.59%            6.19%
Investor C Shares                         3.89%              3.19%                   6.17%            5.06%
Investor N Shares                         3.85%              3.15%                   6.11%            5.00%
Nations Texas Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.37%              4.21%                   6.33%            6.10%
Investor A Shares                         4.17%              3.92%                   6.04%            5.68%
Investor C Shares                         3.87%              3.17%                   5.61%            4.59%
Investor N Shares                         3.87%              3.17%                   5.61%            4.59%
Nations Virginia Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.14%              3.89%                   6.55%            6.15%
Investor A Shares                         3.94%              3.65%                   6.23%            5.77%
Investor C Shares                         3.64%              2.90%                   5.75%            4.58%
Investor N Shares                         3.64%              2.90%                   5.75%            4.58%

                                      112

<PAGE>

Nations Florida Municipal
Bond Fund

Primary A Shares                          5.04%              4.58%                   7.30%            6.64%
Investor A Shares                         4.83%              4.33%                   7.00%            6.28%
Investor C Shares                         4.53%              3.83%                   6.57%            5.55%
Investor N Shares                         4.28%              3.58%                   6.20%            5.19%

Nations Georgia Municipal
Bond Fund

Primary A Shares                          5.05%              4.59%                   8.02%            7.29%
Investor A Shares                         4.83%              4.33%                   7.67%            6.87%
Investor C Shares                         4.55%              3.85%                   7.22%            6.11%
Investor N  Shares                        4.30%              3.60%                   6.83%            5.71%
Nations Maryland Municipal
Bond Fund
- ---------

Primary A Shares                          4.80%              4.34%                   7.50%            6.78%
Investor A Shares                         4.60%              4.10%                   7.19%            6.41%
Investor C Shares                         4.32%              3.62%                   6.75%            5.66%
Investor N Shares                         4.04%              3.34%                   6.31%            5.22%
Nations North Carolina
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.91%              4.45%                   8.02%            7.27%
Investor A Shares                         4.71%              4.21%                   7.69%            6.87%
Investor C Shares                         4.42%              3.72%                   7.22%            6.07%
Investor N Shares                         4.16%              3.46%                   6.79%            5.65%
Nations South Carolina
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          5.00%              4.54%                   8.06%            7.32%
Investor A Shares                         4.80%              4.30%                   7.74%            6.94%
Investor C Shares                         4.50%              3.80%                   7.26%            6.13%
Investor N Shares                         4.25%              3.55%                   6.85%            5.73%
Nations Tennessee
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.85%              4.39%                   7.70%            6.97%
Investor A Shares                         4.65%              4.15%                   7.38%            6.59%
Investor C Shares                         4.34%              3.64%                   6.89%            5.78%
Investor N Shares                         4.10%              3.40%                   6.51%            5.40%

                                      113

<PAGE>

Nations Texas
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          4.87%              4.41%                   7.06%            6.39%
Investor A Shares                         4.67%              4.17%                   6.77%            6.04%
Investor C Shares                         4.37%              3.67%                   6.33%            5.32%
Investor N Shares                         4.12%              3.42%                   5.97%            4.96%

Nations Virginia
Municipal Bond Fund
- -------------------

Primary A Shares                          5.14%              4.68%                   8.13%            7.40%
Investor A Shares                         4.94%              4.44%                   7.81%            7.02%
Investor C Shares                         4.63%              3.93%                   7.32%            6.21%
Investor N Shares                         4.38%              3.68%                   6.92%            5.82%
</TABLE>


The "tax-equivalent" yield is computed by: (a) dividing the portion of the yield
(calculated  as above) that is exempt from  Federal  income tax by (b) one minus
(i) a stated Federal income tax rate, and, for the State Intermediate  Municipal
Bond Funds,  (ii) a state income tax rate.  The Federal  income tax rate used in
calculating the  "tax-equivalent"  yield was 31%. The state income tax rate used
in calculating the  "tax-equivalent"  yield of the State Intermediate  Municipal
Bond Funds was as follows:  Florida --0%;;  Georgia --6%;  Maryland --5%;  North
Carolina  --7.75%;  South Carolina --7%;  Tennessee 6%; Texas --0%; and Virginia
- --5.75%.

     Hypothetical  examples showing the level of taxable yield needed to produce
on  after-tax  equivalent  to an  assumed  tax-free  yield  may be  provided  to
shareholders. Provided below are such illustrations:



     For the Georgia Intermediate Municipal Bond fund and Georgia Municipal 
Bond Fund:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

<S>                           <C>                           <C>                          <C>
Single Return                 $24,000-$58,150               $58,150-$121,300             $121,300-$263,750
Joint Return                  $40,100-$96,900               $96,900-$147,700             $147,700-$263,750
</TABLE>

To match a
 tax-free
yield of:                   A taxable investment would have to pay you:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

     <S>                           <C>                           <C>                          <C>  
     4%                            6.06%                         6.35%                        6.90%
     5%                            7.58%                         7.94%                        8.62%
     6%                            9.09%                         9.52%                        10.34%
     7%                            10.60%                        11.11%                       12.07%
     8%                            12.12%                        12.70%                       13.79%
</TABLE>

The tax-free yields used here are hypothetical and no assurance can be made that
the Funds will obtain any particular  yield. A fund's yield fluctuates as market
conditions change. The tax

                                      114

<PAGE>

brackets and the related yield  calculations are based on the 1996 Federal (28%,
31%,  36%) and  Georgia  (6%) tax rates and assume a Federal tax benefit for the
state and local taxes.  Note the highest 1996 effective  Federal tax rate may be
higher  than 36% due to the  phase-out  of  allowable  itemized  deductions  and
personal  exemptions  for certain  taxpayers.  This  schedule does not take into
account the 39.6% Federal surtax imposed on certain high-income taxpayers.

For the Maryland Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund and Maryland Municipal Bond
Fund:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

<S>                           <C>                           <C>                           <C>
Single Return                 $24,000-$58,150               $58,150-$121,300             $121,300-$263,750
Joint Return                  $40,100-$96,900               $96,900-$147,700             $147,700-$263,750
</TABLE>


To match a
tax-free
yield of:                           A taxable investment would have to pay you:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

    <S>                            <C>                           <C>                         <C>  
     4%                            6.20%                         6.50%                        7.08%
     5%                            7.75%                         8.13%                        8.85%
     6%                            9.30%                         9.76%                        10.62%
     7%                            10.85%                        11.38%                       12.39%
     8%                            12.40%                        13.01%                       14.16%
</TABLE>


The tax-free yields used here are hypothetical and no assurance can be made that
the Funds will obtain any particular  yield. A fund's yield fluctuates as market
conditions change. The tax brackets and the related yield calculations are based
on the 1996 Federal (28%,  31%, 36%),  Maryland (5%) and local county (2.5%) tax
rates and assume a Federal tax benefit for the state and local  taxes.  Note the
highest  1996  effective  Federal  tax  rate may be  higher  than 36% due to the
phase-out of allowable itemized  deductions and personal  exemptions for certain
taxpayers.  This schedule  does not take into account the 39.6%  Federal  surtax
imposed on certain high-income taxpayers.

      For the North Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund and North Carolina
          Municipal Bond Fund:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

<S>                 <C>                 <C>                <C>                   <C>
Single Return       $24,000-$58,150     $58,150-$60,000    $60,000-$121,300      $121,300-$263,750
                    (28%, 7%)           (31%, 7%)          (31%, 7.75%)          (36%, 7.75%)

Joint Return        $40,100-$96,900     $96,900-$100,000    $100,000-$147,700    $147,700-$263,750
                    (28%, 7%)           (31%,7%)               (31%, 7.75%)      (36%, 7.75%)
</TABLE>

                                      115
<PAGE>


To match a
tax-free
yield of:                  A taxable investment would have to pay you:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
       <S>                  <C>                <C>                 <C>                <C>          
       4%                   6.15%              6.45%               6.53%              7.11%
       5%                   7.69%              8.06%              8.16%               8.99%
       6%                   9.23%              9.68%              9.80%              10.67%
       7%                  10.77%             11.29%             11.43%              12.44%
       8%                  12.31%             12.90%             13.06%              14.22%
</TABLE>

The tax-free yields used here are hypothetical and no assurance can be made that
the Funds will obtain any particular  yield. A fund's yield fluctuates as market
conditions change. The tax brackets and the related yield calculations are based
on the 1995 Federal (28%, 31% 36%) and North Carolina (7%,  7.75%) tax rates and
assume a Federal  tax  benefit  for the state  and  local  taxes.  Note that the
highest  1995  effective  Federal  tax  rate may be  higher  than 36% due to the
phase-out of allowable itemized  deductions and personal  exemptions for certain
taxpayers.  This schedule  does not take into account the 39.6%  Federal  surtax
imposed on certain high-income taxpayers.

For the South Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund and South Carolina 
     Municipal Bond Fund:

Single Return       $24,000-$58,150     $58,150-$121,300     $121,300-$263,750
                    (28%, 7%)           (31%, 7%)            (36%, 7%)

Joint Return        $40,100-$96,900      $ 96,900-$147,700   $147,700-$263,750
                    (28%, 7%)                (31%, 7%)       (36%, 7%)

To match a
tax-free
yield of:                  A taxable investment would have to pay you:

                                      116
<PAGE>


       4%                   6.15%              6.45%               7.02%
       5%                   7.69%              8.06%               8.77%
       6%                   9.23%              9.68%              10.53%
       7%                  10.77%             11.29%              12.28%
       8%                  12.31%             12.90%              14.04%


The tax-free yields used here are hypothetical and no assurance can be made that
the Funds will obtain any particular  yield. A fund's yield fluctuates as market
conditions change. The tax brackets and the related yield calculations are based
on the 1995 Federal (28%, 31%, 36%) and South Carolina (7%) tax rates and assume
a Federal tax benefit for the state and local taxes.  Note that the highest 1995
effective  Federal  tax rate may be  higher  than  36% due to the  phase-out  of
allowable  itemized  deductions and personal  exemptions for certain  taxpayers.
This  schedule does not take into account the 39.6%  Federal  surtax  imposed on
certain high-income taxpayers.

For the Tennessee Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund and Tennessee Municipal Bond
          Fund:


Single Return       $24,000-$58,150     $58,150-$121,300     $121,300-$263,750
                    (28%, 6%)           (31%, 6%)            (36%, 6%)

Joint Return        $40,100-$96,900      $96,900-$147,700    $147,700-$263,750
                    (28%, 6%)                (31%, 6%)       (36%, 6%)

                                      117
<PAGE>

To match a
tax-free
yield of:                  A taxable investment would have to pay you:




       4%                   6.06%              6.35%               6.90%
       5%                   7.58%              7.94%               8.62%
       6%                   9.09%              9.52%              10.34%
       7%                  10.61%             11.11%              12.07%
       8%                  12.12%             12.70%              13.79%


The tax-free yields used here are hypothetical and no assurance can be made that
the Funds will obtain any particular  yield. A fund's yield fluctuates as market
conditions change. The tax brackets and the related yield calculations are based
on the 1995 Federal (28%,  31%,  36%) and Tennessee  (6%) tax rates and assume a
Federal tax benefit for the state and local  taxes.  Note that the highest  1995
effective  Federal  tax rate may be  higher  than  36% due to the  phase-out  of
allowable  itemized  deductions and personal  exemptions for certain  taxpayers.
This  schedule does not take into account the 39.6%  Federal  surtax  imposed on
certain high-income taxpayers.

For the Virginia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund and Virginia Municipal Bond 
          Fund:



Single Return       $24,000-$58,150     $58,150-$121,300     $121,300-$263,750
                    (28%, 5.75%)        (31%, 5.75%)         (36%, 5.75%)

Joint Return        $40,100-$96,900      $96,900-$147,700    $147,700-$263,750
                    (28%, 5.75%)           (31%, 5.75%)      (36%, 5.75%)

To match a
tax-free
yield of:                  A taxable investment would have to pay you:

       4%                   6.04%              6.32%               6.87%
       5%                   7.55%              7.91%               8.58%
       6%                   9.06%              9.49%              10.30%

                                      118

<PAGE>

       7%                  10.57%             11.07%              12.02%
       8%                  12.08%             12.65%              13.73%

The tax-free yields used here are hypothetical and no assurance can be made that
the Funds will obtain any particular  yield. A fund's yield fluctuates as market
conditions change. The tax brackets and the related yield calculations are based
on the 1995 Federal (28%, 31%, 36%) and Virginia  (5.75%) tax rates and assume a
Federal tax benefit for the state and local  taxes.  Note that the highest  1995
effective  Federal  tax rate may be  higher  than  36% due to the  phase-out  of
allowable  itemized  deductions and personal  exemptions for certain  taxpayers.
This  schedule does not take into account the 39.6%  Federal  surtax  imposed on
certain high-income taxpayers.

For  the  Municipal   Income  Fund,   Short-Term   Municipal  Income  Fund,  the
Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund, the Florida Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund,
Florida  Municipal  Bond Fund,  the Texas  Intermediate  Municipal Bond Fund and
Texas Municipal Bond Fund:


Single Return       $24,000-$58,150     $58,150-$121,300     $121,300-$263,750
                    (28%)               (31%)                (36%)

Joint Return        $40,100-$96,900      $ 96,900-$147,700   $147,700-$263,750
                    (28%)                      (31%)         (36%)


To match a
tax-free
yield of:                  A taxable investment would have to pay you:

       4%                   5.56%              5.80%               6.25%
       5%                   6.94%              7.25%               7.81%
       6%                   8.33%              8.70%               9.38%
       7%                   9.72%             10.14%              10.94%
       8%                  11.11%             11.59%              12.50%

The tax-free yields used here are hypothetical and no assurance can be made that
the Funds will obtain any particular  yield. A fund's yield fluctuates as market
conditions change. The tax brackets and the related yield calculations are based
on the 1995 Federal (28%, 31%, 36%) tax rates.  This analysis does not take into
account any state or local taxes imposed,  although, with


                                      119


respect to the Florida Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund, the Florida Municipal
Bond Fund, the Texas Intermediate  Municipal  Bond Fund and the Texas  Municipal
Bond Fund,  neither Florida  nor Texas  impose a personal  income tax. Note that
the  highest  1995 effective  Federal  tax rate may be  higher  than  36% due to
the  phase-out  of allowable  itemized  deductions and personal  exemptions for 
certain  taxpayers. This  schedule does not take into account the 39.6%  Federal
 surtax  imposed on certain high-income taxpayers.

      There can be no assurance that all of a yield quoted by one of these Funds
will be tax-free since these Funds may invest in short-term taxable  obligations
for temporary  defensive  periods as described in the  Prospectuses.  Also,  the
above hypothetical  examples are for illustration only. Tax laws and regulations
may be changed at any time by  legislative  or  administrative  actions and such
changes may make the information contained in such examples obsolete.

Total Return Calculations

      Each  Non-Money  Market Fund computes its average  annual total return for
Investor A, Investor C, Investor N, Primary A and Primary B Shares separately by
determining  the average  annual  compounded  rates of return  during  specified
periods that equate the initial amount invested to the ending  redeemable  value
of such  investment.  This is done by dividing the ending  redeemable value of a
hypothetical  $1,000  initial  payment by $1,000 and raising  the  quotient to a
power  equal to one  divided  by the  number  of years  (or  fractional  portion
thereof)  covered by the computation  and subtracting one from the result.  This
calculation can be expressed as follows:

                  T =      [(ERV)1/n - 1]
                               P

Where:     T          =           average annual total return.

           ERV        =           ending redeemable value at the
                                  end of the period covered by 
                                  the computation of a 
                                  hypothetical $1,000 payment 
                                  made at the beginning of the 
                                  period.

             P        =           hypothetical initial payment of $1,000.

             n        =           period covered by the computation, expressed 
                                  in terms of years.

      The Funds compute their  aggregate  total returns for Investor A, Investor
C,  Investor N, Primary A and Primary B Shares  separately  by  determining  the
aggregate  rates of return during  specified  periods that  likewise  equate the
initial amount invested to the ending  redeemable value of such investment.  The
formula for calculating aggregate total return is as follows:

                                    T =     [(ERV) - 1]
                                                 P

      The calculations of average annual total return and aggregate total return
assume the  reinvestment of all dividends and capital gain  distributions on the
reinvestment  dates during the period.  The ending  redeemable  value  (variable
"ERV" in each  formula) is  determined  by assuming  complete  redemption of the
hypothetical investment and the deduction of all

                                      120
<PAGE>

nonrecurring charges at the end of the period  covered by the  computations. The
Funds'  average  annual  total return and aggregate total return quotations for 
Primary A, Investor A, Investor C and  Investor N Shares  reflect  the deduction
of the maximum  sales  charge charged  (if  applicable)  with  respect  to the  
applicable  class of shares in connection  with the purchase of these shares.  
The Funds may also  provide,  in conjunction  with such  quotations  for Primary
A,  Investor  A,  Investor C and Investor N Shares,  additional  quotations that
do not reflect the maximum sales charge when the  quotations  are being provided
to investors who are subject to waiver of or reduction  in the sales  charges  
described in the Investor  Shares Prospectuses.

      Based on the  foregoing  calculations,  the Fund's  average  annual  total
return for all classes of shares were as follows for the periods indicated:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            Average Annual Total Return

                                                                     5-year           Inception
                                                           FYE   period ending     through 3/31/96
                                                       3/31/96      3/31/96
<S>                                                     <C>          <C>                <C>   
Nations Value Fund
       Primary A Shares                                 30.81%       13.95%             13.39%
       Investor A Shares                                30.41%       13.77%             13.66%
       Investor C Shares                                29.15%        N/A               14.94%
       Investor N Shares                                29.82%        N/A               15.44%

Nations Capital Growth Fund
       Primary A Shares                                 26.51%        N/A               13.23%
       Investor A Shares                                26.25%        N/A               12.97%
       Investor C Shares                                24.87%        N/A               12.12%
       Investor N Shares                                25.36%        N/A               13.15%

Nations Emerging Growth Fund
       Primary A Shares                                 34.67%        N/A               16.28%
       Investor A Shares                                34.35%        N/A               16.52%
       Investor C Shares                                33.01%        N/A               15.77%
       Investor N Shares                                33.36%        N/A               18.81%

Nations Disciplined Equity Fund
       Primary A Shares                                 30.95%        N/A               24.52%
       Invest A Shares                                  30.73%        N/A               14.28%
       Investor C Shares                                   N/A        N/A                   N/A
       Investor N Shares                                29.66%        N/A               17.59%

Nations Equity Index Fund
       Primary A Shares                                 31.62%        N/A               18.21%
       Investor A Shares                                   N/A        N/A                   N/A

Nations Balanced Assets Fund
       Primary A Shares                                 23.43%        N/A               11.08%
       Investor A Shares                                23.28%        N/A               10.84%
       Investor C Shares                                22.02%        N/A               10.03%
       Investor N Shares                                22.60%        N/A               10.16%
</TABLE>
                                      121

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                     5-year           Inception
                                                           FYE   period ending     through 3/31/96
                                                       3/31/96      3/31/96

<S>                                                      <C>          <C>                <C> 
Nations Short-Intermediate Government Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  7.36%        N/A                6.78%
       Investor A Shares                                 7.15%        N/A                6.64%
       Investor C Shares                                 6.33%        N/A                4.63%
       Investor N Shares                                 6.71%        N/A                3.65%

Nations Short-Term Income Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  8.11%        N/A                5.09%
       Investor A Shares                                 7.92%        N/A                4.82%
       Investor C Shares                                 7.21%        N/A                4.61%
       Investor N Shares                                 7.74%        N/A                4.78%

Nations Diversified Income Fund
       Primary A Shares                                 11.21%        N/A                9.17%
       Investor A Shares                                10.94%        N/A                8.91%
       Investor C Shares                                 9.95%        N/A                8.57%
       Investor N Shares                                10.38%        N/A                6.35%

Nations Strategic Fixed Income Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  9.38%        N/A                6.58%
       Investor A Shares                                 9.16%        N/A                6.38%
       Investor C Shares                                 8.32%        N/A                6.01%
       Investor N Shares                                 8.67%        N/A                4.58%

Nations Municipal Income Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  8.91%       8.04%               7.94%
       Investor A Shares                                 8.70%       7.89%               7.80%
       Investor C Shares                                 7.67%        N/A                6.41%
       Investor N Shares                                 8.10%        N/A                4.60%

Nations Short-Term Municipal Income Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  5.72%        N/A                4.09%
       Investor A Shares                                 5.51%        N/A                4.02%
       Investor C Shares                                 4.93%        N/A                4.91%
       Investor N Shares                                 5.35%        N/A                3.73%

Nations Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  7.62%        N/A                4.91%
       Investor A Shares                                 7.42%        N/A                4.34%
       Investor C Shares                                 6.51%        N/A                9.77%
       Investor N Shares                                 7.08%        N/A                3.89%

Nations Florida Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  7.21%        N/A                6.06%
       Investor A Shares                                 6.99%        N/A                5.91%
       Investor C Shares                                 6.17%        N/A                5.48%
       Investor N Shares                                 6.67%        N/A                4.60%
</TABLE>

                                      122
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                     5-year           Inception
                                                           FYE   period ending     through 3/31/96
                                                       3/31/96      3/31/96

<S>                                                      <C>          <C>                <C> 
Nations Georgia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  7.21%        N/A                6.62%
       Investor A Shares                                 7.00%        N/A                6.54%
       Investor C Shares                                 6.18%        N/A                5.73%
       Investor N Shares                                 6.68%        N/A                4.37%

Nations Maryland Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  7.24%       6.58%               7.06%
       Investor A Shares                                 7.03%       6.43%               6.93%
       Investor C Shares                                 6.20%        N/A                5.24%.
       Investor N Shares                                 6.70%        N/A                4.30%

Nations North Carolina Intermediate Municipal
Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  6.99%        N/A                5.79%
       Investor A Shares                                 6.78%        N/A                5.58%
       Investor C Shares                                 5.96%        N/A                5.19%
       Investor N Shares                                 6.46%        N/A                4.34%

Nations South Carolina Intermediate Municipal
Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  7.18%        N/A                6.31%
       Investor A Shares                                 6.97%        N/A                6.29%
       Investor C Shares                                 6.15%        N/A                5.62%
       Investor N Shares                                 6.65%        N/A                4.58%

Nations Tennessee Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  7.19%        N/A                4.83%
       Investor A Shares                                 6.97%        N/A                4.82%
       Investor C Shares                                 6.15%        N/A                9.74%
       Investor N Shares                                 6.65%        N/A                4.39%

Nations Texas Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  6.84%        N/A                5.39%
       Investor A Shares                                 6.63%        N/A                4.70%
       Investor C Shares                                 5.81%        N/A                9.22%
       Investor N Shares                                 6.31%        N/A                4.00%

Nations Virginia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  7.21%       6.45%               6.68%
       Investor A Shares                                 6.99%       6.31%               6.55%
       Investor C Shares                                 6.17%        N/A                5.22%
       Investor N Shares                                 6.67%        N/A                4.18%
</TABLE>
                                      123

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                     5-year           Inception
                                                           FYE   period ending     through 3/31/96
                                                       3/31/96      3/31/96

<S>                                                      <C>          <C>                <C>      
Nations Florida Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  8.08%        N/A                3.46%
       Investor A Shares                                 7.87%        N/A                2.99%
       Investor C Shares                                 6.84%        N/A               13.44%
       Investor N Shares                                 7.28%        N/A                2.44%

Nations Georgia Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  8.64%        N/A                3.01%
       Investor A Shares                                 8.24%        N/A                2.95%
       Investor C Shares                                 7.41%        N/A               13.69%
       Investor N Shares                                 7.84%        N/A                2.52%

Nations Maryland Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  7.94%        N/A                9.09%
       Investor A Shares                                 7.72%        N/A                3.39%
       Investor C Shares                                 6.67%        N/A               12.74%
       Investor N Shares                                 7.13%        N/A                1.94%

Nations North Carolina Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  8.24%        N/A                2.83%
       Investor A Shares                                 8.02%        N/A                3.22%
       Investor C Shares                                 7.00%        N/A               13.73%
       Investor N Shares                                 7.44%        N/A                2.50%

Nations South Carolina Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  8.58%        N/A                4.40%
       Investor A Shares                                 8.36%        N/A                4.92%
       Investor C Shares                                 7.28%        N/A               13.46%
       Investor N Shares                                 7.77%        N/A                3.75%

Nations Tennessee Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  8.71%        N/A                6.09%
       Investor A Shares                                 8.49%        N/A                4.50%
       Investor C Shares                                 7.47%        N/A               13.79%
       Investor N Shares                                 7.90%        N/A                3.38%

Nations Texas Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  8.97%        N/A                3.01%
       Investor A Shares                                 8.75%        N/A                3.34%
       Investor C Shares                                 7.69%        N/A               13.65%
       Investor N Shares                                 8.16%        N/A                2.51%

Nations Virginia Municipal Bond Fund
       Primary A Shares                                  8.55%        N/A                2.64%
       Investor A Shares                                 8.32%        N/A                3.33%
       Investor C Shares                                 7.29%        N/A               13.59%
       Investor N Shares                                 7.73%        N/A                2.08%
</TABLE>

                                      124

<PAGE>



         Based on the foregoing calculations, the Funds' aggregate total returns
for all classes of shares were as follows for the periods indicated:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                     Aggregate Annual Total Return
                                    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  5-Year period  5-Year period     Inception      Inception
                                    FYE            FYE            ending         ending            through        through
                                    3/31/96        3/31/96        3/31/96        3/31/96           3/31/96        3/31/96
                                    Without        Including      Without        Including         Without        Including
                                    Sales          Sales          Sales          Sales             Sales          Sales
                                    Charges        Charges        Charges        Charges           Charges        Charges
<S>                                 <C>            <C>            <C>           <C>                <C>            <C>   
Nations Value Fund
   Primary A Shares                 30.81%         N/A            92.13$         ?%                127.24%        N/A
   Investor A Shares                30.41%         N/A            90.58%         ?%                124.50%        N/A
   Investor C Share                 29.65%         29.15%         N/A            N/A               69.44%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                29.82%         N/A            N/A            N/A               49.79%         N/A

Nations Capital Growth Fund
   Primary A Shares                 26.51%         N/A            N/A            N/A               54.49%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                26.25%         N/A            N/A            N/A               53.12%         40.09%
   Investor C Shares                25.37%         24.87%         N/A            N/A               49.17%         45.02%
   Investor N Shares                25.36%         N/A            N/A            N/A               41.57%         34.76%

Nations Emerging Growth Fund
   Primary A Shares                 34.67%         N/A            N/A            N/A               65.08%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                34.35%         NA/            N/A            N/A               65.81%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                33.51%         33.01%         N/A            N/A               61.76%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                33.36%         N/A            N/A            N/A               62.41%         N/A

Nations Disciplined Equity Fund
   Primary A Shares                 30.95%         N/A            N/A            N/A               115.29%        N/A
   Investor A Shares                30.73%         N/A            N/A            N/A               43.00%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                N/A            N/A            N/A            N/A               23.43%         22.93%
   Investor N Shares                29.66%         N/A            N/A            N/A               35.24%         N/A

Nations Equity Index Fund
   Primary A Shares                 31.62%         N/A            N/A            N/A               46.77%         N/A
  Investor A Shares                 N/A            N/A            N/A            N/A               12.67%         N/A

Nations Balanced Assets Funds
   Primary A Shares                 23.43%         N/A            N/A            N/A               44.43%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                23.28%         N/A            N/A            N/A               43.27%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                22.52%         22.02%         N/A            N/A               39.67%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                22.60%         N/A            N/A            N/A               31.29%         N/A

Nations Short-Intermediate
Government Fund
   Primary A Shares                 7.36%          N/A            N/A            N/A               35.80%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                7.15%          N/A            N/A            N/A               34.85%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                6.83%          6.33%          N/A            N/A               18.70%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                6.71%          N/A            N/A            N/A               10.61%         N/A

Nations Short-Term Income Fund
   Primary A Shares                 8.11%          N/A            N/A            N/A               18.99%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                7.92%          N/A            N/A            N/A               17.90%         N/A
   Investor C. Shares               7.71%          7.21%          N/A            N/A               17.07%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                7.74%          N/A            N/A            N/A               14.05%         N/A

Nations Diversified Income Fund
   Primary A Shares                 11.21%         N/A            N/A            N/A               34.97%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                10.94%         N/A            N/A            N/A               33.05%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                10.45%         9.95%          N/A            N/A               32.17%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                10.38%         N/A            N/A            N/A               18.91%         N/A
</TABLE>

                                      125
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                     Aggregate Annual Total Return
                                    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                 5-Year period   5-Year period    Inception     Inception
                                    FYE           FYE            ended           ended            through       through
                                    11/30/95      11/30/95       11/30/95        11/30/95         11/30/95      11/30/95
                                    Without       Including      Without         Including        Without       Including
                                    Sales         Sales          Sales           Sales            Sales         Sales
                                    Charges       Charges        Charges         Charges          Charges       Charges

<S>                                <C>            <C>             <C>            <C>               <C>            <C>  
Nations Strategic Fixed Income
Fund
   Primary A Shares                 9.38%          N/A            N/A            N/A               24.36%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                9.16%          N/A            N/A            N/A               23.13%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                8.82%          8.32%          N/A            N/A               21.74%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                8.67%          N/A            N/A            N/A               13.42%         N/A

Nations Municipal Income Fund
   Primary A Shares                 8.91%          N/A            47.20%         ?%                48.39%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                8.70%          N/A            46.20%         ?%                47.38%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                8.17%          7.67%          N/A            N/A               26.51%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                8.10%          N/A            N/A            N/A               13.48%         N/A

Nations Short-Term Municipal
Income Fund
   Primary A Shares                 5.72%          N/A            N/A            N/A               10.45%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                5.51%          N/A            N/A            N/A               9.97%          N/A
   Investor C Shares                5.43%          4.93%          N/A            N/A               9.36%          N/A
   Investor N Shares                5.35%          N/A            N/A            N/A               9.47%          N/A

Nations Intermediate Municipal
Bond Fund
   Primary A Shares                 7.62%          N/A            N/A            N/A               13.64%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                7.42%          N/A            N/A            N/A               11.78%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                7.01%          6.51%          N/A            N/A               14.03%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                7.08%          N/A            N/A            N/A               9.30%          N/A

Nations Florida Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
   Primary A Shares                 7.21%          N/A            N/A            N/A               21.45%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                6.99%          N/A            N/A            N/A               20.84%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                6.67%          6.17%          N/A            N/A               19.19%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                6.67%          N/A            N/A            N/A               13.50%         N/A

Nations Georgia Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
   Primary A Shares                 7.21%          N/A            N/A            N/A               28.89%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                7.00%          N/A            N/A            N/A               28.09%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                6.68%          6.18%          N/A            N/A               23.48%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                6.68%          N/A            N/A            N/A               12.78%         N/A

Nations Maryland Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
   Primary A Shares                 7.24%          N/A            37.52%         ?%                46.36%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                7.03%          N/A            36.59$         ?%                45.38%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                6.70%          6.20%          N/A            N/A               21.32          N/A
   Investor N Shares                6.70%          N/A            N/A            N/A               12.55%         N/A

Nations North Carolina
Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
   Primary A Shares                 6.99%          N/A            N/A            N/A               20.44%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                6.78%          N/A            N/A            N/A               19.60%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                6.46           5.96%          N/A            N/A               18.11          N/A
   Investor N Shares                6.46%          N/A            N/A            N/A               12.71%         N/A

Nations South Carolina
Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
   Primary A Shares                 7.18%          N/A            N/A            N/A               29.55%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                6.97%          N/A            N/A            N/A               26.87%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                6.65%          6.15%          N/A            N/A               22.99%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                6.65%          N/A            N/A            N/A               13.42%         N/A
</TABLE>

                                      126
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                     Aggregate Annual Total Return
                                    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                 5-Year period   5-Year period    Inception     Inception
                                    FYE           FYE            ended           ended            through       through
                                    11/30/95      11/30/95       11/30/95        11/30/95         11/30/95      11/30/95
                                    Without       Including      Without         Including        Without       Including
                                    Sales         Sales          Sales           Sales            Sales         Sales
                                    Charges       Charges        Charges         Charges          Charges       Charges
<S>                                 <C>           <C>            <C>            <C>                <C>            <C>  
Nations Tennessee Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
   Primary A Shares                 7.19%          N/A            N/A            N/A               14.99%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                6.97%          N/A            N/A            N/A               15.14%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                6.65%          6.15%          N/A            N/A               13.99$%        N/A
   Investor N Shares                6.65%          N/A            N/A            N/A               12.82%         N/A

Nations Texas Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
  Primary A Shares                  6.84%          N/A            N/A            N/A               18.40%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                6.63%          N/A            N/A            N/A               15.60%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                6.31%          5.81%          N/A            N/A               13.23%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                6.31%          N/A            N/A            N/A               11.48%         N/A

Nations Virginia Intermediate
Municipal Bond Fund
   Primary A Shares                 7.21%          N/A            36.69%         ?%                52.55%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                6.99%          N/A            35.78%         ?%                49.35%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                6.67%          6.17%          N/A            N/A               21.24%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                6.67%          N/A            N/A            N/A               12.22%         N/A

Nations Florida Municipal Bond
Fund                                8.08%          N/A            N/A            N/A               8.11%          N/A
   Primary A Shares
   Investor A Shares                7.87%          N/A            N/A            N/A               7.03%          N/A
   Investor C Shares                7.34%          6.84%          N/A            N/A               19.43%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                7.28%          N/A            N/A            N/A               6.07%          N/A

Nations Georgia Municipal Bond
Fund                                8.64%          N/A            N/A            N/A               6.79%          N/A
   Primary A Shares
   Investor A Shares                8.24%          N/A            N/A            N/A               6.78%          N/A
   Investor C Shares                7.91%          7.41%          N/A            N/A               19.81%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                7.84%          N/A            N/A            N/A               6.28%          N/A

Nations Maryland Municipal Bond
Fund                                7.94%          N/A            N/A            N/A               14.21%         N/A
   Primary A Shares
   Investor A Shares                7.72%          N/A            N/A            N/A               8.34%          N/A
   Investor C Shares                7.17%          6.67%          N/A            N/A               18.40%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                7.13%          N/A            N/A            N/A               4.81%          N/A

Nations North Carolina Municipal
Bond Fund
   Primary A Shares                 8.24%          N/A            N/A            N/A               6.39%          N/A
   Investor A Shares                8.02%          N/A            N/A            N/A               7.95%          N/A
   Investor C Shares                7.50%          7.00%          N/A            N/A               19.86%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                7.44%          N/A            N/A            N/A               6.23%          N/A

Nations South Carolina Municipal
Bond Fund
   Primary A Shares                 8.58%          N/A            N/A            N/A               10.23%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                8.36%          N/A            N/A            N/A               12.20%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                7.78%          7.28%          N/A            N/A               19.47%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                7.77%          N/A            N/A            N/A               9.42%          N/A

Nations Tennessee Municipal Bond
Fund
   Primary A Shares                 8.71%          N/A            N/A            N/A               13.08%         N/A
   Investor A Shares                8.49%          N/A            N/A            N/A               11.19%         N/A
   Investor C Shares                7.97%          7.47%          N/A            N/A               19.95%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                7.90%          N/A            N/A            N/A               8.47%          N/A
</TABLE>


                                      127
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     Aggregate Annual Total Return
                                    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                 5-Year period   5-Year period    Inception     Inception
                                    FYE           FYE            ended           ended            through       through
                                    11/30/95      11/30/95       11/30/95        11/30/95         11/30/95      11/30/95
                                    Without       Including      Without         Including        Without       Including
                                    Sales         Sales          Sales           Sales            Sales         Sales
                                    Charges       Charges        Charges         Charges          Charges       Charges
<S>                                 <C>           <C>            <C>            <C>                <C>            <C>  
Nations Texas Municipal Bond Fund
   Primary A Shares                 8.97%          N/A            N/A            N/A               6.60%          N/A
   Investor A Shares                8.75%          N/A            N/A            N/A               7.80%          N/A
   Investor C Shares                8.19%          7.69%          N/A            N/A               19.74%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                8.16%          N/A%           N/A            N/A               6.25%          N/A

Nations Virginia Municipal Bond
Fund                                8.55%          N/A            N/A            N/A               5.96%          N/A
   Primary A Shares
   Investor A Shares                8.32%          N/A            N/A            N/A               8.16%          N/A
   Investor C Shares                7.79%          7.29%          N/A            N/A               19.66%         N/A
   Investor N Shares                7.73%          N/A            N/A            N/A               5.16%          N/A
</TABLE>


Fee  waivers  and/or  expense  reimbursements  were in  effect  for the  periods
presented. Primary B Shares were not offered during the period described above.


                                      128
<PAGE>


         From time to time, the yields of each class of shares of a Money Market
Fund may be compared to the  respective  averages  compiled by Donoghue's  Money
Fund Report,  a widely  recognized  independent  publication  that  monitors the
performance of money market funds, or to the average yields reported by the Bank
Rate Monitor for money market deposit  accounts  offered by the 50 leading banks
and thrift institutions in the top five metropolitan statistical areas.

         Each Fund may quote  information  obtained from the Investment  Company
Institute,  national financial  publications,  trade journals and other industry
sources in its  advertising  and sales  literature.  In addition,  the Funds may
compare  the  performance  and  yield of a class or series of shares to those of
other mutual  funds with similar  investment  objectives  and to other  relevant
indices or to rankings  prepared by independent  services or other  financial or
industry publications that monitor the performance of mutual funds. For example,
the performance and yield of a class of shares in a Fund may be compared to data
prepared by Lipper  Analytical  Services,  Inc. The  performance  and yield of a
class of shares in the Value Fund,  Capital Growth Fund,  Balanced  Assets Fund,
Equity  Index Fund and  Emerging  Growth Fund may be compared to the  Standard &
Poor's 500 Stock Index,  an  unmanaged  index of a group of common  stocks,  the
Consumer  Price  Index,  or the  Dow  Jones  Industrial  Average,  a  recognized
unmanaged  index of  common  stocks  of 30  industrial  companies  listed on the
Exchange.   The   performance   and   yield  of  a  class  of   shares   in  the
Short-Intermediate  Government  Fund  may be  compared  to the  Shearson  Lehman
Intermediate   Government   Bond  Index,  an  unmanaged  index  of  intermediate
government  securities.  Performance  and yield  data as  reported  in  national
financial publications such as Money Magazine, Forbes, Barron's, The Wall Street
Journal,  and The New York  Times,  or in  publications  of a local or  regional
nature,  also may be used in comparing the performance of a class of shares in a
Fund.

         The Short-Intermediate  Government Fund seeks to provide higher current
yields  than  money  market  funds  and  short-term  treasury  obligations.  The
Short-Intermediate   Government  Fund  also  seeks  to  maintain  greater  price
stability  than  higher  yielding  long-term  bond  funds.   Therefore,  in  its
advertisements and sales materials,  the Short-Intermediate  Government Fund may
compare  performance of the  Short-Intermediate  Government Fund to money market
indices, such as those compiled by IBC/Donoghue,  Inc. and Bank Rate Monitor. In
such advertising and sales materials, the Short-Intermediate Government Fund may
also compare the price stability of the  Short-Intermediate  Government Fund, or
indices of funds with  similar  investment  objectives,  to indices of long term
government  bond funds such as those  compiled by Salomon  Brothers and Shearson
Lehman Brothers Inc. The Short-Intermediate Government Fund is not meant to be a
substitute  for a money  market  fund which  seeks to maintain a fixed net asset
value of $1.00 per share.

         Each Fund may quote  information  obtained from the Investment  Company
Institute in its advertising materials and sales literature.

         Ibbotson Data. Ibbotson Associates of Chicago,  Illinois,  ("Ibbotson")
provides  historical  returns of the capital  markets in the United States.  The
Funds may  compare  the

                                      129
<PAGE>


performance  of their  share  classes  or series to the long-term  performance  
of the U.S.  capital  markets  in  order to  demonstrate general  long-term risk
versus  reward  investment   scenarios.   Performance comparisons could also 
include the value of a hypothetical  investment in common stocks, long-term 
bonds or treasuries.

         The  capital  markets  tracked by  Ibbotson  are common  stocks,  small
capitalization stocks, long-term corporate bonds,  intermediate-term  government
bonds,  long-term  government  bonds,  Treasury  Bills,  and  the  U.S.  rate of
inflation.  These capital markets are based on the returns of several  different
indices.  For common stocks, the S&P is used. For small  capitalization  stocks,
return is based on the return achieved by Dimensional  Fund Advisors (DFA) Small
Company Fund. This fund is a market-value-weighted  index of the ninth and tenth
deciles of the  Exchange,  plus stocks  listed on the  American  Stock  Exchange
(AMEX) and  over-the-counter  (OTC) with the same or less  capitalization as the
upperbound of the Exchange ninth decile. At year-end 1995, the DFA Small Company
Fund  contained  approximately  2,663  stocks,  with a weighted  average  market
capitalization of $165.75 million. The unweighted average market  capitalization
was $82.97 million, while the median was $56.0 million.

         Unlike an  investment  in a common stock mutual fund,  an investment in
bonds that are held to  maturity  provides  a fixed and  stated  rate of return.
Bonds have a senior priority in liquidation or bankruptcy to common stocks,  and
interest on bonds is generally  paid from assets of the  corporation  before any
distributions  to common  shareholders.  Bonds rated in the two  highest  rating
categories are considered  high quality and to present minimal risks of default.
See Schedule A for a more  complete  explanation  of these  ratings of corporate
bonds.  An advantage of investing in  government  bonds is that,  in many cases,
they are backed by the credit and taxing power of the United States  government,
and  therefore,  such  securities  may  present  little  or no risk of  default.
Although  government  securities  fluctuate in price, they are highly liquid and
may be  purchased  and sold with  relatively  small  transaction  costs  (direct
purchase of Treasury securities can be made with no transaction costs).

         Long-term  corporate  bond returns are based on the  performance of the
Salomon  Brothers  Long-Term-High-Grade  Corporate Bond Index and include nearly
all "Aaa-" and "Aa-" rated bonds. Returns on intermediate-term  government bonds
are based on a one-bond portfolio constructed each year, containing a bond which
is the  shortest  noncallable  bond  available  with a maturity  not less than 5
years. This bond is held for the calendar year and returns are recorded. Returns
on long-term government bonds are based on a one-bond portfolio constructed each
year, containing a bond that meets several criteria,  including having a term of
approximately  20 years.  The bond is held for the calendar year and returns are
recorded.  Returns  on U.S.  Treasury  Bills are based on a  one-bill  portfolio
constructed each month,  containing the shortest-term  bill having not less than
one  month to  maturity.  The  total  return  on the bill is the month end price
divided by the previous  month-end price, minus one. Data up to 1976 is from the
U.S.  Government Bond file at the University of Chicago's Center for Research in
Security  Prices;  the Wall Street Journal is the source  thereafter.  Inflation
rates are based on the CPI. Ibbotson calculates total returns in the same method
as the Funds.

                                      130
<PAGE>

                                  MISCELLANEOUS

Certain Record Holders

         The  following  indicates  those  persons  who  owned 5% or more of the
indicated class of shares. Information provided is as of July 2, 1996.


      J. Steven Summer                                               5.80%
      103 Saura Lane
      Winston-Salem, NC  27107

      Richard G. Summer                                              5.01%
      8227 Stafford Mill Road
      Oak Ridge, NC 27310



                        Nations Government Money Market Fund

      Investor A Shares
      USCI Inc Warrant Account                                      50.09%
      P.O. Box 1645
      Norcross, GA  30091

      Ramon A. Alvarez                                               9.95%
      2116 Great Falls Street
      Falls Church, VA  22043

      Norwest Bank Minnesota                                         5.68%
      Trustee for Rockdale County/
      C&D Charter
      Attn:  Polly Berquist-Corp. Trust
      6th Street and Marquette Avenue
      Minneapolis, MN  55479-0069

      Investor B Shares
      Norbert Dickman &                                             20.64%
      Robert Dickman Trustees
      Barbara Fasken 1995 Trust
      303 West Wall Avenue, Ste. 1900
      Midland, TX 79701

      Hare & Co., Bank of New York                                  19.50%
      Attn: Stif/Master Note
      One Wall Street, 5th Floor
      New York, NY 10286


                                      131

<PAGE>




         Fasken Oil and Ranch Ltd.                                   18.35%
         303 W. Wall Avenue, Ste. 1900
         Midland, TX 79701

         Peggy Ebright Dickson Trust                                  7.59%
         303 West Wall, Ste. 1900
         Midland, TX 79701

         Liberty Investment Management Inc.                           5.29%
         2502 Rockey Point Drive, Suite 500
         Tampa, FL  33607

         Eli S. Jacobs                                                5.67%
         4450 South Park Avenue, #1507
         Chevy Chase, MD  20815

         Investor C Shares
         George Charles Zutes &                                      34.35%
         Lucinda Zutes JTTEN
         975 Bayshore Drive
         Tarpon Springs, FL  34689-2403

         George Charles Zutes                                        19.14%
         975 Bayshore Drive
         Tarpon Springs, FL  34689-2403

         Charles H. Meyer & Elna R. Meyer                             9.24%
         Co-Trustees Charles R. Meyer Trust
         Dated 10-27-95
         1607 Frontier Dr.
         Melbourne, FL  32940

         Beulah W. Kelsey Trustee                                     6.88%
         Dated December 10, 1992
         Beulah W. Kelsey Revocable Trust
         5 Whistling Swan
         Hilton Head, SC  29928-5732

         Sara Kraus                                                   6.05%
         8617 Camille Dr.
         Potomac, MD  20854

         Daily Shares
         Diane Stunbo & Thomas Petrarca &                            99.62%
         Thomas Jackson TTEES
         Bond Cote Corporation
         401(k) Retirement Plan
         P.O. Box 729 Burgis Avenue
         Polaski, VA  24301

                                      132
   
<PAGE>


                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

                               Nations Value Fund

        Investor C Shares
        George H. Lumsden and                                              7.83%
        Erika J. Lumsden JTTEN
        16 Full Sweep Drive
        Savannah, GA 31419-9330



                           Nations Capital Growth Fund


        Investor C Shares
        Dean Witter Reynolds Cust. for                                    7.73%
        Herbert Halperin
        IRA Standard 6/14/93
        6905 Nevis Road
        Bethesda, MD 20817-4642

        Dean Witter Reynolds Cust. for                                     5.88%
        Dale Morris
        IRA Standard 6/14/93
        818 19th Avenue South
        Nashville, TN 37203-3202

        Patricia L. DeLorenzo                                              5.72%
        7 Durban Place
        Hilton Head, SC 29926

        Janet Howard &                                                     5.13%
        Dr. Mark Clark TTEE
          For The Tidewater Heart Specialists
          Profit Sharing Plan DTD 1-1-94
        2112-B Hartford Road
        Hampton, VA  23666

                              Nations Emerging Growth Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Ron Underwood &                                                    5.04%
        David Brown Trustees
        Dallas Heart Group
        401K Plan
        8440 Walnut Hill Lane
        Suite 700
        Dallas, TX  75231

                                      133

<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        Investor C Shares
        Janet C. Howard &                                                 15.37%
        Dr. Mark Clark, TTEE
          For The Tidewater Heart Specialists
          Profit Sharing Plan
        2112-B Hartford Road
        Hampton, VA  23666

        Dean Witter Reynolds Cust for                                      6.53%
        William O. Kirker MD
        IRA Standard  6/14/93
        6130 Moss Spring Road
        Columbia, SC 29209

        Dean Witter Reynolds Cust. for                                     5.45%
        Bernard D. Bouvier
        IRA Rollover 6/14/93
        633 Dolphin Road
        Fripp Island
        St. Helena Island, SC 29920-9517

        Marian Brodsky                                                     5.18%
        7104 Millwood Drive
        Bethesda, MD 20817-6145

        Dean Witter Reynolds Cust. For                                     5.02%
        William B. McGuire, Jr.
        IRA Standard Dated 06/14/93
        212 South Tryon Street, Suite 800
        Charlotte, NC  28281-8174

                            Nations Disciplined Equity Fund
        Primary A Shares
        PT NationsBank                                                    11.86%
        101 South Tryon Street
        Charlotte, NC  28255

        TR U/A Memorial Mission Hospital                                   7.84%
        600 Peachtree Street, N.E.
        7th Fl. - Performance Measurement
        Atlanta, GA  30308-000

        TR U/A Educational Foundation School Endowment                     6.60%
        P.O. Box 2446
        Chapel Hill, NC  27514-0000

        Flagstar Pension Plan                                              6.35%
        203 East Main Street
        Spartanburg, SC  29319-9979                                        5.36%
                                      134
<PAGE>


                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        Investor A Shares
        Jack B. Chadsey                                                   11.10%
        9050 Hammock Lake Drive
        Miami, FL  33156

        Ron Underwood & David Brown TTEES                                 10.88%
        Dallas Heart Group
        401K Plan
        8440 Walnut Hill Lane, Suite 700
        Dallas, TX  75231

        Zachary Taylor TTEE FBO                                            6.13%
        Kleen Tex Industries Inc.
        PSP & 401K Savings Plan and Trust
        P.O. Box KTI
        La Grange, GA  30241

        Investor C Shares
        Richard A. Royds TTEE                                             22.43%
        Miller Family Trust
        2900 South Tower Pennzoil Place
        Houston, TX  77002

        Frank L. Scofield, Trustee                                        11.77%
        Dated January 4, 1976
        FLSAB Trust
        1411 West Avenue, Suite 200
        Austin, TX  78701

        Dean Witter Reynolds Cust. For                                    10.20%
        Sidney W. Boone
        IRA Rollover Dated 05/04/95
        1411 E. 51st Street
        Savannah, GA  31404-4037

        Dean Witter Reynolds Cust. For                                     7.19%
        Jean M. De Ru
        IRA Standard DTD 06/14/93
        2664 Sharondale Drive
        Atlanta, GA  30305-3858

        Mila K. Kennedy Cust.                                              5.49%
        FBO Haydn Kennedy Collard UTMA TX
        15751 Mapleview Circle
        Dallas, TX  75230

        John A. Hardin                                                     5.26%
        P.O. Box 751
        Rock Hill, SC  29731-6751

                                      135
<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        BSDC Cust. Rollover IRA FBO                                        5.07%
        Rosemary L. Waring
        4601 Anson Ct.
        Plano, TX  75024


                              Nations Balanced Assets Fund


        Investor C Shares
        Carmine L. Dorio & Carmen Dorio JTTEN                             17.75%
        2580 Blythe Lane
        Snellville, GA 30278

        Haeson Mills TTE FBO                                               5.81%
        Q Systems Inc.
        401K Plan
        5201 Leesburg Pike, Suite 700
        Falls Church, VA  22041

        Patricia Earle Lipscomb                                            5.64%
        Estate of Patricia N. Earle
        622 McDaniel Avenue
        Greenville, SC 29605


                           Nations Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Mitchel Wong &                                                    36.96%
        Rose T. Wong JTWROS
        1700 Stoneridge Terrace
        Austin, TX  78746

        Laverne A. Nebel                                                  14.44%
        Laverne A. Nebel Trust
        DTD 11/04/92
        2248 Kingfisher Lane
        Clearwater, FL 34622-3322

        Lonnie K. Ledbetter &                                              8.95%
        Saundra Ledbetter JTWROS
        P.O. Box 5687
        Arlington, TX 76005

        Helen Goh &                                                        5.04%
        Jeffrey M. Kadet JTWROS
        c/o Arthur Anderson & Co. MOSCOW
        69 W. Washington Street
        Chicago, IL 60602
                                      136

<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        Investor C Shares
        Neal S. Platzer and                                               51.37%
        Jack W. Crosby JTTEN
        Special Account
        1410 Lost Ridge Circle
        Seabrook, TX 77586-4514

        Paul J. Rangel and                                                20.28%
        Kimberly K. Rangel JTTEN%
        915 Kipp Avenue
        Kemah, TX 77565

        Charles W. Doolin                                                 14.37%
        3508 Harvard Avenue
        Dallas, TX 75205

        D. Keith Cobb                                                      5.20%
        2521 Del Lago Drive
        Del Lago Isle
        Ft. Lauderdale, FL  33316

        Yun-Wu Chan and                                                    5.13%
        Jinn-Tyi Tung JTTEN
        834 Fern Springs Court
        Houston, TX  77062


        Investor N Shares
        WIN Communication Corp.                                           15.04%
        ATTN: Bob Poole
        6755 Jimmy Carter Boulevard
        Norcross, GA  30071

        Ellen Aston Paull                                                  9.45%
        1407 N. Weston Lane
        Austin, TX  78733

        Joanne B. Stegall                                                  8.79%
        517 Cameo Terrace
        Chesapeake, VA  23320

        Eleanor B. Calkins and                                             5.91%
        W. D. Calkins JTTEN
        9602 Baseline
        Dallas, TX  75243

        Mary Louise Foster                                                 5.83%
        700 Mease Plaza
        Apt 232
        Dunedin, FL  34698-6619


                                      137
<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        Jerry Ann Bell                                                     5.75%
        213 Lucille Lane
        Toccoa, GA  30577

                             Nations Municipal Income Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Lloyd E. Raport                                                   22.07%
        5600 Wisconsin Ave., Apt. - 17E
        Chevy Chase, MD 20815

        Irwin Grossman                                                     5.72%
        540 Preston Commons
        8117 Preston Road
        Dallas, TX  75225

        Investor C Shares
        Sunrise OK Tires                                                   6.67%
        c/o Vernon Hunter
        1013 W. Sunrise Boulevard
        Fort Lauderdale, FL  33311

        Vernon E. Potter &                                                 5.53%
        Maxine Potter JT TEN
        P.O. Box 820069
        Dallas, TX  75382

        Silvio Capoluongo &                                                5.47%
        Diana McNaughton JT TEN
        3031 Newark Street, N.W.
        Washington, D.C.  20006-3342

        Jake Schulhofer &                                                  5.13%
        William Schulhofer
        Daniel Scott Schulfoer &
        WD Schulfoer JT WROS
        P.O. Box 314
        Waynesville, NC  28786

        Lynn Fain Friedman Trust                                           5.02%
        DTD 7/5/94
        Lynn Fain Friedman Trustee
        5817 Midhill Street
        Bethesda, MD  20817
                                      138
<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

                             Nations Short-Term Income Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Graward General                                                   23.09%
        Attn: Kellye Norcross-Controller
        P.O. Box 290909
        Nashville, TN  37229-0909

        Roger W. Sant                                                      9.98%
        1001 N 19th Street Suite 2000
        Arlington, VA  22209

        Dean Witter Reynolds Cust For                                      6.95%
        Charles T. Bell
        IRA Rollover Dated 6/14/93
        503 Geiger Circle
        Key Largo, FL  33037

        Gerald S. Gordon                                                   5.84%
        2307 Bluebonnet
        Houston, TX  77030-3601

        Investor C Shares
        Virginia United Methodist Homes Inc.                              20.65%
        Attn:  Cheryl H. Duff
        7113 Three Chopt Road, Ste. 300
        Richmond, VA 23226

        Dr. George B. Richardson                                          14.06%
        516 Azalea Lane
        Florence, SC 29501

        Roger W. Sant                                                     12.48%
        1001 N. 19th Street, St. 2000
        Arlington, VA 22209

        Industrial Marine Service, Inc.                                   10.11%
        Attn:  Bob Lewis
        1301 Marsh Street
        P.O. Box 1779
        Norfolk, VA 23501

        Wanda M. Shearer                                                   6.17%
        1065 Pine Top Road
        Belton, SC 29627

        The Lincolnshire Trust                                             5.32%
        5208 Lincolnshire
        Dallas, TX 75287
                                      139
<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

                                Nations Diversified Income Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Dean Witter Reynolds Cust. for                                     6.39%
        James T. Pearce IRA SEP 6/14/93
        P.O. Box 1986
        Greenville, SC 29602-1986

        Howard M. Arnold                                                   6.33%
        9825 Conestoga Way
        Potomac, MD 20854-4713


        Investor C Shares
        None

                              Nations Strategic Fixed Income Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Sheryl Isaacs TTREE                                               11.34%
        Good Buy Sportswear
        401K Saving Plan
        2400 31st St. S.
        St. Petersburg, FL  33712

        Rental Uniform of Florence                                         6.64%
        P.O. Box 12410
        Florence, SC  29504-0410

        Investor C Shares
        Patricia Earle Lipscomb Per Rep.                                  28.36%
        Estate of Patricia N. Earle
        622 McDaniel Ave.
        Greenville, SC  29605

        BSDT Cust. IRA FBO                                                26.26%
        James A. Blanchard
        9 Las Brisas
        Austin, TX  78746


        Alton J. Turley &                                                 14.09%
        Christine Turley JTTEN
        55 Swan Lake Road
        Stockbridge, GA  30281

                                      140
<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        John M. Lewis &                                                    8.09%
        Robert V. Dipauli &
        John H. Vaughan TTEES FBO
        St. Joe Communications Inc.
        Employees Salary Deferral Plan
        502 Fifth Street
        Port St. Joe, FL  32456

        Mary Jane Bakery Salesman Assoc.                                   6.85%
        ATTN:  Frank Rollins
        1948 Country Manor Lane
        Virginia Beach, VA  23456

        NationsBank of Florida NA Succ. TTEE                               6.42%
        FBO William E. Clark
        TUA DTD 8-8-95
        ATTN SAS/06050230066100
        PO Box 831575
        Dallas, TX  75283-1575

        Investor N Shares
        Dean Witter Reynolds Cust for                                      8.38%
        Robert A. Pierce
        IRA Rollover 6/14/93
        10 Lavington Ct.
        Columbia, SC  29209-1944


                       Nations Florida Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund


        Investor A Shares
        Charlotte G. Bowen                                                10.23%
        1371 South Ocean Blvd.
        Apt. 915
        Pompano Beach, FL  33062

        P. McNeil                                                          9.69%
        2310 Del Mar Island
        Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301

        Lillian J. Clayman and                                             8.21%
        Charles E. Clayman JTWROS
        6161 NW 2nd Ave #625
        Boca Raton, FL 33487

        Janice Quale Revocable Trust                                       6.12%
        U/A DTD 2/23/87
        c/o NorWest Investment Management & Trust
        Attn:  C. Kaehler
        6th & Marquette Ave.
        Minneapolis, MN  55479-0039

                                      141

<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        Investor C Shares
        Bertram C. Ellison and                                             6.15%
        Joline M. Ellison JTTEN
        651 NW Hiatus Road
        Plantation, FL 33325-2010

        Louise D. Lee                                                      5.69%
        408 SE 9 Court
        Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316

        Investor N Shares
        None

                              Nations Florida Municipal Bond Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Jacqueline Bailes, Charles E. Bailes, Jr.,                        58.87%
        Charles E. Bailes III and J.D. Bailes
        Bailes Investment Account
        6212 Dartmoor Ct.
        Orlando, FL 32819

        Robert P. Cornelssen, Trustee                                     25.25%
        Robert P. Cornelssen Trust
        U/A DTD 4/18/91
        1868 Shore Drive South
        Apartment 401
        St. Petersburg, FL  33707

        Harold A. Dargel and                                               6.08%
        Phyllis A. Dargel Co-TTEES
        Harold A. Dargel REV TR DTD 10-20-89
        5721 SW 16th Court
        Plantation, FL  33317-5901


        Arthur W. Ihle, Trustee                                            5.44%
        Arthur W. Ihle REVOC LIV Trust
        DTD 11-21-94
        910 Dogwood Dr., Apt. 447
        Delray Beach, FL  33483

        Investor C Shares
        None

                       Nations Georgia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Lyles W. Sanders &                                                16.05%
        Mary C. Sanders, JTTEN
        2305 Welton Place
        Dunwoody, GA 30338

                                      142

<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        Investor C Shares
        Letty C. Cagle and                                                20.16%
        Douglas Cagle, JTTEN
        8592 Roswell Road, Apt. 318
        Atlanta, GA  30350

        Ruth D. Lautz TTEE                                                8.47%
        Ruth D. Lautz Revocable Trust
        3046 Shinnecock Hills
        Duluth, GA 30136

        Arthur R. Lautz TTEE                                               6.61%
        Arthur R. Lautz Revocable Trust
        3046 Shinnecock Hills
        Duluth, GA 30136

        Charles D. Davidson and                                            6.15%
        Judith L. Davidson JTTEN
        370 Rosalie Ct.
        Alpharetta, GA  30202

        Investor N Shares
        Edward J. Derst, Jr. Trustee                                      33.32%
        U/A of Edward J. Derst, Jr.
        Trust Agreement DTD 11/15/88
        258 Varn Drive
        Savannah, GA 31403

                              Nations Georgia Municipal Bond Fund

        Primary A Shares
        None

        Investor A Shares
        Lowell A. Young and                                               60.20%
        MaryAnn E. Young JT-TEN
        4031 Oakridge Bend
        Valdosta, GA  31602

        Enzor Leroy Bechman                                               22.72%
        2314 Golfcourse Dr.
        Albany, GA  31707

        Monte L. Poole and                                                16.90%
        Venetia C. Poole JTWROS
        1344 Hidden Hills Parkway
        Stone Mountain, GA  30088

        Investor C Shares
        F. Wayne Weaver and                                               96.49%
        Edith T. McWaters JTTEN
        1576 Bethsaida Road
        Riverdale, GA  30296

                                      143
<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

                       Nations Maryland Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Robert Gladstone &                                                16.50%
        Leslie Gladstone JTTEN
        2468 Belmont Road, N.W.
        Washington, D.C. 20008-1610

        Investor C Shares
        Margot H. Hahn                                                     9.00%
        815 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Suite 601
        Washington, D.C.  20006-4004

        Douglas D. Van Riper &                                             5.36%
        Mary E. Van Riper JTTEN
        10513 Patuxent Ridge Way
        Laurel, MD  20723

        William Bobrow                                                     5.17%
        Miriam Bobrow JTTEN
        1008 East Boxhill Drive
        Kensington, MD  20895

        Investor N Shares
        Laurel R.G. Moreno, Trustee                                        5.44%
        U/Deed DTD 10/14/91
        FBO Miro Gudelsky
        10808 Riverwood Drive
        Potomac, MD 20854-1334

                             Nations Maryland Municipal Bond Fund

        Primary A Shares
        None

        Investor A Shares
        Carol C. House &                                                  37.60%
        Peter W. House JTWROS
        4210 Leeward Place
        Bethesda, MD  20816

        Thomas A. Beach &                                                 23.22%
        Joan A. Beach JTWROS
        P.O. Box 1294
        Rockville, MD  20849-1294

        Raymond A. Turetsky and                                           14.84%
        Bess H. Turetsky JTTEN
        11220 Woodson Avenue
        Kensington, MD  20895-1427

                                      144
<PAGE>


                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        Charles E. Chlan                                                  13.85%
        Sole Proprietorship
        7200 Bel Air Road
        Baltimore, MD  21206

        Dona L. Lechliter and                                              7.31%
        Stephen C. Lechliter JTTEN
        2921 N. Leisure World Blvd., Apt. 427
        Silver Spring, MD  20906

        Investor C Shares

        None


                    Nations North Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Jerry Wordsworth                                                  21.23%
        P.O. Box 800
        Rocky Mount, NC  27802

        W. Frank Dowd, Jr.                                                 7.82%
        P.O. Box 35430
        Charlotte, NC  28235-5430

        Wayne Joyce and                                                    7.60%
        Julia Y. Joyce JTTEN
        2694 Merry Oaks Trail
        Winston-Salem, NC  27103

        Elizabeth H. Miller                                                7.34%
        P.O. Box 68
        Tuxedo, NC  28784

        Investor C Shares
        Barbara B. Coyner                                                 18.36%
        513 Lake Boone Trail
        Raleigh, NC  27608-1027

        J. Robert Stout &                                                 13.19%
        Maggie Smith Stout JTTEN
        P.O. Box 35343
        Greensboro, NC  27425-5343

        W. Joseph Selvia and                                               8.50%
        Jay P. Selvia JTTEN
        5730 Phillips Bridge Road
        Winston-Salem, NC  27104-3323


                                      145
<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        Anna B. Steele                                                     8.19%
        2041 Georgia Avenue
        Winston-Salem, NC  27104

        William F. Cox                                                     8.17%
        3225 Bermuda Village
        Advance, NC  27006-9478

        Jean Parker Moore                                                  6.07%
        2721 Spring Garden Road
        Winston-Salem, NC  27106

        Roger W. Simmons and                                               5.01%
        Mary R. Simmons JTTEN
        150 River Hill Drive
        Advance, NC  27006

        Investor N Shares
        James E. Smith and                                                 5.49%
        Bettie T. Smith JTTEN
        18227 Capstan Greens Road
        Cornelius, NC  28031

                          Nations North Carolina Municipal Bond Fund

        Primary A Shares
        None

        Investor A Shares
        Barbara Bartow Church                                             22.66%
        1535 Providence Road
        Charlotte, NC  28207-2627

        Harlan O. Greene and                                              18.47%
        Raydell S. Greene JTTEN
        384 Hayes Wellborn Road
        Deep Gap, NC  28618-9738

        Andrew M. Silton and                                              13.37%
        Margaret Kanze Silton JTWROS
        5314 Germaine Terrace
        Charlotte, NC  28226

        Byron E. Gross &                                                   7.11%
        Pauline S. Gross JTWROS
        3768 Osceola Road
        Elon College, NC  27244-9784

        Susan E. Bales and                                                 6.89%
        Audrey D. Bales JTTEN
        Box 712
        Wingate, NC  28174

                                      146
<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        L. Elwood Wight                                                    6.47%
        Margaret C. Wright JTWROS
        1113 Devonshire Dr.
        New Bern, NC  28562

        Investor C Shares
        Eugene G. Agres                                                   86.20%
        611 Oyster Bay Dr.
        Sunset Beach, NC  28468


                    Nations South Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund

        Investor A Shares
        James T. Pearce                                                   16.05%
        P.O. Box 1986
        Greenville, SC 29602-1986

        Joseph F. Rice                                                     8.05%
        777 Bradburn Drive
        Mt. Pleasant, S.C. 29464-5114

        James Bloor Trustee                                                6.07%
        Revocable Trust NA 8/19/92
        James Bloor Trust
        51 Bird Song Way
        Hilton Head, S.C. 29926-1364

        Investor C Shares
        Anne M. Inman                                                      8.87%
        1829 Senate St. Apt. 11-A
        Columbia, SC  29201

        Helena B. Clark                                                    5.42%
        324 Broad River Drive
        Santee, SC  29142-9301

        Investor N Shares
        None

                          Nations South Carolina Municipal Bond Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Donna R. Cart                                                     41.58%
        1140 Partridge Road
        Spartanburg, SC  29302-3328

        James C. Cuppia &                                                 30.64%
        Doris W. Cuppia TTEES
        Jerome C. Cuppia Jr. Trust DTD 10/28/87
        8 Outerbridge Circle
        Hilton Head Island, SC  29926-2916
   
                                   147
<PAGE>


                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        Doris White Cuppia TTEE FBO                                        9.84%
        Doris White Cuppia TR DTD
        10-28-87 by Doris White Cuppia
        8 Outerbridge Circle
        Hilton Head Island, SC  29926

        Adina Allen                                                        5.74%
        1283 Dogwood Dr. NE
        Orangeburg, SC  29115

        Investor C Shares
        None

                      Nations Tennessee Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Bob G. Long                                                       15.99%
        P.O. Box 266
        Hermitage, TN  37076

        Marshall T. Polk, III                                             14.23%
        P.O. Box 90148
        Nashville, TN  37209

        Joseph L. DiLorenzo                                                7.28%
        4400 Belmont Park Ter. #249
        Nashville, TN  37215

        Inman Construction Corp.                                           5.88%
        Attn:  Frank Inman Jr.
        5100 Poplar Ave., Suite 1210
        Memphis, TN  38137

        Investor C Shares
        None

        Investor N Shares
        John O. Colton                                                    15.54%
        6211 Jocelyn Hollow Road
        Nashville, TN  37205-3213

        Robert R. Hayes and                                               10.41%
        Vira E. Hayes JTTEN
        400 Bryants Lane
        Woodbury, TN  37190-1641

                             Nations Tennessee Municipal Bond Fund

        Primary A Shares
        Jerry L. Benefield &                                               9.15%
        Evelyn S. Benefield
        4036 Barfield Road
        Murfreesboro, TN  37129-5719

                                      148

<PAGE>


                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        Miriam F. Hildebrand                                               7.08%
        884 Edmondson Pike
        Brentwood, TN  37027

        Investor A Shares
        None

        Investor C Shares
        Frank W. Condurelis and                                           93.42%
        Jane E. Condurelis JTTEN
        806 Brentview Drive
        Nashville, TN  37220

        Investor N Shares
        Miriam F. Hildebrand                                               9.80%
        884 Edmondson Pike
        Brentwood, TN  37027

                        Nations Texas Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund

        Investor A Shares
        MOTCO                                                             20.83%
        P.O. Box 17001-Trust
        San Antonio, TX  78217

        Harriet G. Wolf                                                   19.49%
        2520 Old Gate Road
        San Antonio, TX 78230

        James Bradley Curlee Trustee                                      17.82%
        For the Homer Hill Shaw Trust
        6428 Tulip Lane
        Dallas, TX  75230

        Steven F. Beard Jr.                                               11.64%
        P.O. Box 428
        Spicewood, TX  78669

        Mary Bradfield Briggs                                              5.44%
        4410 Three Oaks Drive
        Arlington, TX  76016-2351

        Investor C Shares
        Orsinger Investments Ltd.                                         99.60%
        2206 Camelback Drive
        San Antonio, TX  78209-4262

        Investor N Shares
        Montine T. Wisdom                                                  9.31%
        6335 W. Northwest Hwy. #1318
        Dallas, TX  75225-3533

                                      149

<PAGE>


                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only


        James Robert Mallory and                                           8.77%
        Faith K. Mallory JTTEN
        2400 Winton Terrace East
        Ft. Worth, TX 76109

        Oliver Roofing Systems                                             6.36%
        906-B Justin Lane
        P.O. Box 180191
        Austin, TX  78718


                               Nations Texas Municipal Bond Fund

        Primary A Shares
        None

        Investor A Shares
        MOTCO                                                             61.15%
        P.O. Box 17001-Trust
        San Antonio, TX  78217

        Liberto Investments Ltd.                                          14.46%
        Partnership
        621 S. Flores St.
        San Antonio, TX  78204-1220

        Jeanette Dorman and                                                7.63%
        Taylor Dorman JTWROS
        Route 13, Box 6089
        Lufkin, TX 75901

        Carolyn A. Lee and                                                 6.96%
        Philip A. Lee JTTEN
        P.O. Box 7917
        Horseshoe Bay, TX  78657

        Shirley A. Wagner                                                  5.97%
        3002 San Paula
        Dallas, TX  75228

        Investor C Shares
        None

                                      150

<PAGE>
                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

                       Nations Virginia Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund

        Investor A Shares
        None

                             Nations Virginia Municipal Bond Fund

        Investor A Shares
        William P. Moore &                                                32.07%
        Vera W. Moore JTTEN
        P.O. Box 1270
        Hopewell, VA  23860

        Rodney M. Carlson and                                              9.64%
        Joyce L. Carlson JTTEN
        3608 South Creek Ct.
        Chesapeake, VA  23325

        Rebecca C. Bell                                                    9.05%
        1092 Oaklawn Drive
        Culpepper, VA 22701

        Jessie E. Spells
        14927 Boydell Dr.                                                  7.00%
        Centreville, VA  22020-1534

        Lester W. Morris
        c/o C. Hunter Jones                                                6.93%
        308 Hunter Street
        Ashland, VA  23005-1910

        Creola N. Shearin
        2205 Parkside Ave.                                                 6.77%
        Richmond, VA  23228

        Investor C Shares
        Russell E. Herring
        P.O. Box 568                                                       6.20%
        Crozet, VA  22932


                           Nations Short-Term Municipal Income Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Carl W. Cheek                                                     25.57%
        120 North Charles Street
        Red Lion, PA  17356

        Ralph Jerry Parker, Jr.                                           14.69%
        500 Forest Avenue
        Richmond, VA  23229-6808

                                      151
<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        Richard H. Kristinik                                              14.20%
        10 W Terrace
        Houston, TX  77007

        Mitchel Wong &
        Rose T. Wong JTWROS                                               11.96%
        1700 Stoneridge Terrace
        Austin, TX  78746

        Jerome Dobson                                                     11.35%
        Bridget Dobson JTTEN
        3490 Piedmont Road
        Suite 1206
        Atlanta, GA  30305

        Investor C Shares
        Carl W. Cheek                                                     34.69%
        120 North Charles Street
        Red Lion, PA  17356

        Steven L. Feder &                                                 25.33%
        Thomas H. Lindsey JTWROS
        3001 NE 19th St.
        Fort Lauderdale, FL  33305

        Louis J. Scott &                                                  10.45%
        Leslie G. Scott JTWROS
        9337B Katy Fwy, Ste. 329
        Houston, TX 77024

        Jay L. Willmann and                                                6.88%
        Catherine B. Willmann JTTEN
        2918 Kassarine Pass
        Austin, TX 78704-4655

        Ilah Coffee Merriman                                               5.70%
        #8 Rue Du Lac
        Dallas, TX  75230-0000

        Investor N Shares
        William L. Spadoni and                                             7.28%
        Julia S. Spadoni JTTEN
        P.O. Box 1019
        Myrtle Beach, SC 29578-1019

        James H. Sparks and                                                6.60%
        Karen M. Sparks JTTEN
        4121 Roenker Lane
        Virginia Beach, VA 23455
   
                                   152
<PAGE>

                                                                  Percentage of
                                                                 Shares held of
          Name and Address                                         Record Only

        James D. Yopp, Jr. &                                               5.44%
        Johanna F. Yopp JTTEN
        1095 Fieldwood Lane
        Winston Salem, NC  27106-5863

                          Nations Short-Intermediate Government Fund

        Investor A Shares
        Burgess Pigment Co.
        P.O. Box 349 Deck Blvd.                                            5.82%
        Sandersville, GA  31082

         As of July 2, 1996, NationsBank Corporation and its affiliates owned of
record  more than 25% of the  outstanding  shares of the Trust  acting as agent,
fiduciary, or custodian for its customers and may be deemed a controlling person
of the Trust under the 1940 Act.

                                      153
<PAGE>




                                   SCHEDULE A

                             DESCRIPTION OF RATINGS

         The  following  summarizes  the highest six ratings  used by Standard &
Poor's  Corporation  ("S&P") for corporate and municipal  bonds.  The first four
ratings denote investment grade securities.

       AAA - This is the highest rating assigned by S&P to a debt obligation and
       indicates  an  extremely  strong  capacity  to  pay  interest  and  repay
       principal.

       AA - Debt rated AA is  considered  to have a very strong  capacity to pay
       interest and repay  principal and differs from AAA issues only in a small
       degree.

       A - Debt  rated  A has a  strong  capacity  to  pay  interest  and  repay
       principal although it is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects
       of  changes  in  circumstances  and  economic  conditions  than  debt  in
       higher-rated categories.

       BBB - Debt rated BBB is regarded  as having an  adequate  capacity to pay
       interest  and repay  principal.  Whereas it  normally  exhibits  adequate
       protection   parameters,   adverse   economic   conditions   or  changing
       circumstances  are more  likely  to lead to a  weakened  capacity  to pay
       interest and repay  principal for debt in this category than for those in
       higher-rated categories.

       BB, B - Bonds rated BB and B are  regarded,  on balance as  predominantly
       speculative  with respect to capacity to pay interest and repay principal
       in accordance  with the terms of the  obligation.  Debt rated BB has less
       near-term   vulnerability  to  default  than  other  speculative  issues.
       However,  it faces  major  ongoing  uncertainties  or exposure to adverse
       business,   financial,   or  economic  conditions  which  could  lead  to
       inadequate capacity to meet timely interest and principal payments.  Debt
       rated B has a greater  vulnerability  to default  but  currently  has the
       capacity to meet  interest  payments and  principal  repayments.  Adverse
       business,  financial,  or economic conditions will likely impair capacity
       or willingness to pay interest and repay principal.

         To provide more detailed  indications of credit quality,  the AA, A and
BBB, BB and B ratings may be modified by the addition of a plus or minus sign to
show relative standing within these major rating categories.

         The  following  summarizes  the  highest  six  ratings  used by Moody's
Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's") for corporate and municipal bonds. The first
four denote investment grade securities.

       Aaa - Bonds that are rated Aaa are judged to be of the best quality. They
       carry the smallest degree of investment  risk and are generally  referred
       to as "gilt edge."  Interest  payments are  protected by a large or by an
       exceptionally  stable margin and  principal is secure.  While the various
       protective  elements  are  likely  to  change,  such  changes  as  can be
       visualized are most unlikely to impair the fundamentally  strong position
       of such issues.
                                      A-1

<PAGE>
       Aa - Bonds  that are  rated Aa are  judged to be of high  quality  by all
       standards.  Together  with the Aaa group they comprise what are generally
       known as high  grade  bonds.  They are rated  lower  than the best  bonds
       because margins of protection may not be as large as in Aaa securities or
       fluctuation of protective  elements may be of greater  amplitude or there
       may be other  elements  present  which make the  long-term  risks  appear
       somewhat larger than in Aaa securities.

       A - Bonds that are rated A possess many favorable  investment  attributes
       and are to be considered upper medium grade  obligations.  Factors giving
       security to principal and interest are considered adequate,  but elements
       may be present which suggest a susceptibility  to impairment  sometime in
       the future.

       Baa - Bonds that are rated Baa are considered  medium grade  obligations,
       i.e.,  they are neither  highly  protected nor poorly  secured.  Interest
       payments  and  principal  security  appear  adequate  for the present but
       certain protective  elements may be lacking or may be  characteristically
       unreliable  over any great  length of time.  Such bonds lack  outstanding
       investment  characteristics and in fact have speculative  characteristics
       as well.

       Ba - Bonds  that are rated Ba are  judged to have  speculative  elements;
       their future cannot be as well assured.  Often the protection of interest
       and  principal  payments  may be very  moderate  and  thereby not as well
       safeguarded  during  both  good  times  and bad  times  over the  future.
       Uncertainty of position characterizes bonds in this class.

       B -  Bonds  that  are  rated  B  generally  lack  characteristics  of the
       desirable investment.  Assurance of interest and principal payments or of
       maintenance  of other terms of the contract  over any long period of time
       may be small.

         Moody's  applies  numerical  modifiers  (1,  2 and 3) with  respect  to
corporate bonds rated Aa through B. The modifier 1 indicates that the bond being
rated ranks in the higher end of its generic  rating  category;  the  modifier 2
indicates a mid-range ranking;  and the modifier 3 indicates that the bond ranks
in the lower end of its generic rating category. With regard to municipal bonds,
those  bonds in the Aa, A and Baa groups  which  Moody's  believes  possess  the
strongest  investment  attributes are designated by the symbols Aa1, A1 or Baa1,
respectively.

         The following summarizes the highest four ratings used by Duff & Phelps
Credit Rating Co.  ("D&P") for bonds,  each of which denotes that the securities
are investment grade.

       AAA - Bonds that are rated AAA are of the  highest  credit  quality.  The
       risk factors are  considered to be  negligible,  being only slightly more
       than for risk-free U.S. Treasury debt.

       AA - Bonds  that are  rated  AA are of high  credit  quality.  Protection
       factors are  strong.  Risk is modest but may vary  slightly  from time to
       time because of economic conditions.

       A - Bonds that are rated A have protection  factors which are average but
       adequate.  However, risk factors are more variable and greater in periods
       of economic stress.

                                      A-2
<PAGE>


       BBB - Bonds that are rated BBB have below average  protection factors but
       still are  considered  sufficient  for prudent  investment.  Considerable
       variability in risk during economic cycles.

         To provide more detailed  indications of credit quality,  the AA, A and
BBB  ratings  may  modified  by the  addition  of a plus or  minus  sign to show
relative standing within these major categories.

         The  following  summarizes  the  highest  four  ratings  used by  Fitch
Investors  Service,  Inc.  ("Fitch")  for bonds,  each of which denotes that the
securities are investment grade:

       AAA - Bonds  considered to be investment  grade and of the highest credit
       quality.  The obligor has an exceptionally strong ability to pay interest
       and repay  principal,  which is unlikely  to be  affected  by  reasonably
       foreseeable events.

       AA - Bonds  considered  to be  investment  grade and of very high  credit
       quality.  The  obligor's  ability to pay interest and repay  principal is
       very  strong,  although  not quite as strong as bonds rated AAA.  Because
       bonds rated in the AAA and AA categories are not significantly vulnerable
       to foreseeable future  developments,  short-term debt of these issuers is
       generally rated F-1+.

       A - Bonds  considered to be investment  grade and of high credit quality.
       The obligor's  ability to pay interest and repay  principal is considered
       to be strong,  but may be more  vulnerable to adverse changes in economic
       conditions and circumstances than bonds with higher ratings.

       BBB - Bonds considered to be investment grade and of satisfactory  credit
       quality.  The  obligor's  ability to pay interest and repay  principal is
       considered to be adequate.  Adverse  changes in economic  conditions  and
       circumstances,  however,  are more likely to have adverse impact on these
       bonds,  and therefore  impair timely  payment.  The  likelihood  that the
       ratings of these  bonds will fall below  investment  grade is higher than
       for bonds with higher ratings.

         To provide more detailed  indications of credit quality,  the AA, A and
BBB  ratings  may be  modified  by the  addition of a plus or minus sign to show
relative standing within these major rating categories.

         The  following  summarizes  the  two  highest  ratings  used by S&P for
short-term municipal notes:

         SP-1 -- Very strong or strong  capacity to pay  principal and interest.
Those issues determined to possess overwhelming safety characteristics are given
a "plus" (+) designation.

         SP-2 -- Satisfactory capacity to pay principal and interest.

         The following  summarizes  the two highest  ratings used by Moody's for
short-term municipal notes and variable-rate demand obligations:

                                      A-3

<PAGE>

         MIG-1/VMIG-1 -- Obligations  bearing these designations are of the best
quality,  enjoying  strong  protection  from  established  cash flows,  superior
liquidity  support  or  demonstrated   broad-based  access  to  the  market  for
refinancing.

         MIG-2/VMIG-2  --  Obligations  bearing these  designations  are of high
quality,  with  ample  margins  of  protection  although  not so large as in the
preceding group.

         The three highest rating categories of D&P for short-term debt, each of
which denotes that the securities are investment  grade,  are D-1, D-2, and D-3.
D&P employs three  designations,  D-1+, D-1 and D-1-,  within the highest rating
category.  D-1+  indicates  highest  certainty  of  timely  payment.  Short-term
liquidity,  including  internal  operating  factors and/or access to alternative
sources  of funds,  is  judged  to be  "outstanding,  and  safety is just  below
risk-free  U.S.  Treasury  short-term  obligations."  D-1  indicates  very  high
certainty of timely  payment.  Liquidity  factors are excellent and supported by
good fundamental  protection  factors.  Risk factors are considered to be minor.
D-1- indicates high certainty of timely  payment.  Liquidity  factors are strong
and  supported by good  fundamental  protection  factors.  Risk factors are very
small.  D-2 indicates good certainty of timely  payment.  Liquidity  factors and
company fundamentals are sound. Although ongoing funding needs may enlarge total
financing  requirements,  access to capital  markets is good.  Risk  factors are
small. D-3 indicates  satisfactory  liquidity and other protection factors which
qualify the issue as  investment  grade.  Risk factors are larger and subject to
more variation. Nevertheless, timely payment is expected.

         The following  summarizes  the two highest  rating  categories  used by
Fitch for short-term  obligations  each of which denotes that the securities are
investment grade:

         F-1+ securities  possess  exceptionally  strong credit quality.  Issues
assigned  this rating are regarded as having the  strongest  degree of assurance
for timely payment.

         F-1 securities possess very strong credit quality. Issues assigned this
rating  reflect an assurance of timely payment only slightly less in degree than
issues rated F-1+.

         F-2 securities possess good credit quality. Issues carrying this rating
have a satisfactory  degree of assurance for timely  payment,  but the margin of
safety is not as great as for issues assigned the F-1+ and F-1 ratings.

         Commercial  paper rated A-1 by S&P indicates  that the degree of safety
regarding timely payment is strong. Those issues determined to possess extremely
strong safety  characteristics  are denoted A-1+. Capacity for timely payment on
commercial paper rated A-2 is satisfactory, but the relative degree of safety is
not as high as for issues designated A-1.

         The rating Prime-1 is the highest  commercial  paper rating assigned by
Moody's.   Issuers  rated  Prime-1  (or  related  supporting  institutions)  are
considered  to have a  superior  capacity  for  repayment  of senior  short-term
promissory   obligations.   Issuers   rated   Prime-2  (or  related   supporting
institutions)  are considered to have a strong  capacity for repayment of senior
short-term  promissory  obligations.  This will normally be evidenced by many of
the  characteristics of issuers rated Prime-1 but, to a lesser degree.  Earnings
trends and  coverage  ratios,  while sound,

                                      A-4
<PAGE>

will be more subject to  variation. Capitalization characteristics, while still
appropriate, may be more affected by external conditions. Ample alternate 
liquidity is maintained.

         For commercial paper, D&P uses the short-term ratings described above.

         For  commercial  paper,  Fitch uses the  short-term  ratings  described
         above.

         Thomson  BankWatch,   Inc.  ("BankWatch")  ratings  are  based  upon  a
qualitative  and  quantitative  analysis  of all  segments  of the  organization
including,  where  applicable,   holding  company  and  operating  subsidiaries.
BankWatch  ratings do not constitute a recommendation  to buy or sell securities
of  any of  these  companies.  Further,  BankWatch  does  not  suggest  specific
investment criteria for individual clients.

         BankWatch  long-term ratings apply to specific issues of long-term debt
and preferred stock. The long-term ratings specifically assess the likelihood of
untimely payment of principal or interest over the term to maturity of the rated
instrument. The following is the four investment grade ratings used by BankWatch
for long-term debt:

      AAA - The  highest  category;  indicates  ability to repay  principal  and
      interest on a timely basis is extremely high.

      AA - The second highest category; indicates a very strong ability to repay
      principal  and interest on a timely basis with  limited  incremental  risk
      versus issues rated in the highest category.

      A - The third highest  category;  indicates the ability to repay principal
      and  interest  is strong.  Issues  rated "A" could be more  vulnerable  to
      adverse  developments  (both internal and external) than  obligations with
      higher ratings.

      BBB - The  lowest  investment  grade  category;  indicates  an  acceptable
      capacity to repay principal and interest. Issues rated "BBB" are, however,
      more vulnerable to adverse  developments (both internal and external) than
      obligations with higher ratings.

         Long-term  debt  ratings  may  include a plus (+) or  minus(-)  sign to
      indicate where within a category the issue is placed.

         The  BankWatch  short-term  ratings apply to  commercial  paper,  other
senior short-term  obligations and deposit  obligations of the entities to which
the rating has been assigned.

         The BankWatch  short-term ratings specifically assess the likelihood of
an untimely payment of principal or interest.

      TBW-1 -- The  highest  category;  indicates  a very high  likelihood  that
      principal and interest will be paid on a timely basis.

                                      A-5
<PAGE>


      TBW-2 -- The second highest category; while the degree of safety regarding
      timely repayment of principal and interest is strong,  the relative degree
      of safety is not as high as for issues rated "TBW-1".

      TBW-3 -- The lowest  investment grade category;  indicates that while more
      susceptible  to adverse  developments  (both  internal and external)  than
      obligations  with  higher  ratings,  capacity  to  service  principal  and
      interest in a timely fashion is considered adequate.

      TBW-4  --  The  lowest  rating  category;   this  rating  is  regarded  as
      non-investment grade and therefore speculative.

         The following  summarizes the four highest  long-term debt ratings used
by IBCA Limited and its affiliate, IBCA Inc. (collectively "IBCA"):

      AAA -- Obligations for which there is the lowest expectation of investment
      risk.   Capacity  for  timely  repayment  of  principal  and  interest  is
      substantial  such that adverse changes in business,  economic or financial
      conditions are unlikely to increase investment risk significantly.

      AA -- Obligations  for which there is a very low expectation of investment
      risk.   Capacity  for  timely  repayment  of  principal  and  interest  is
      substantial. Adverse changes in business, economic or financial conditions
      may increase investment risk albeit not very significantly.

      A -- Obligations for which there is a low expectation of investment  risk.
      Capacity  for  timely  repayment  of  principal  and  interest  is strong,
      although adverse changes in business, economic or financial conditions may
      lead to increased investment risk.

      BBB--Obligations  for  which  there  is  currently  a low  expectation  of
      investment  risk.  Capacity for timely repayment of principal and interest
      is adequate,  although adverse changes in business,  economic or financial
      conditions are more likely to lead to increased  investment  risk than for
      obligations in other categories.

      A plus or minus  sign may be  appended  to a rating  below  AAA to  denote
      relative status within major rating categories.


The following summarizes the two highest short-term debt ratings used by IBCA:

      A1+ - When issues posses a particularly strong credit feature, a rating of
A1+ is assigned.

      A1 - Obligations supported by the highest capacity for timely repayment.

      A2 -- Obligations supported by a good capacity for timely repayment.

                                      A-6

<PAGE>


                                   SCHEDULE B

                        ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONCERNING

                                                 OPTIONS & FUTURES

         As stated in the Prospectus, each Non-Money Market Fund, may enter into
futures  contracts  and options  for hedging  purposes.  Such  transactions  are
described in this Schedule.  During the current  fiscal year,  each of the Funds
intends to limit its  transactions in futures  contracts and options so that not
more than 5% of the  Fund's net  assets  are at risk.  Furthermore,  in no event
would any Fund purchase or sell futures  contracts,  or related options thereon,
for hedging purposes if,  immediately  thereafter,  the aggregate initial margin
that is  required  to be posted by the Fund under the rules of the  exchange  on
which the futures contract (or futures option) is traded, plus any premiums paid
by the Fund on its open  futures  options  positions,  exceeds  5% of the Fund's
total assets,  after taking into account any  unrealized  profits and unrealized
losses on the Fund's  open  contracts  and  excluding  the amount that a futures
option is  "in-the-money"  at the time of purchase.  (An option to buy a futures
contract is  "in-the-money"  if the value of the contract that is subject to the
option  exceeds  the  exercise  price;  an option to sell a futures  contract is
"in-the-money"  if the exercise  price exceeds the value of the contract that is
subject of the option.)

I.       Interest Rate Futures Contracts.

         Use of Interest Rate Futures Contracts.  Bond prices are established in
both the cash  market and the  futures  market.  In the cash  market,  bonds are
purchased  and sold with payment for the full  purchase  price of the bond being
made in cash,  generally  within  five  business  days after the  trade.  In the
futures market, only a contract is made to purchase or sell a bond in the future
for  a  set  price  on a  certain  date.  Historically,  the  prices  for  bonds
established in the futures market have tended to move generally in the aggregate
in concert with the cash market prices and have  maintained  fairly  predictable
relationships.  Accordingly,  a Fund may use interest rate futures as a defense,
or hedge, against anticipated interest rate changes and not for speculation.  As
described below, this would include the use of futures contract sales to protect
against expected  increases in interest rates and futures contract  purchases to
offset the impact of interest rate declines.

         A Fund  presently  could  accomplish a similar  result to that which it
hopes to achieve through the use of futures contracts by selling bonds with long
maturities and investing in bonds with short  maturities when interest rates are
expected to increase,  or conversely,  selling short-term bonds and investing in
long-term bonds when interest rates are expected to decline. However, because of
the liquidity  that is often  available in the futures  market the protection is
more likely to be  achieved,  perhaps at a lower cost and without  changing  the
rate of interest being earned by the Fund, through using futures contracts.

         Description  of Interest  Rates  Futures  Contracts.  An interest  rate
futures  contract  sale would  create an  obligation  by a Fund,  as seller,  to
deliver the specific type of financial  instrument called for in the contract at
a specific future time for a specified price. A futures contract

                                      B-1

<PAGE>

purchase would create an obligation by the Fund, as purchaser, to take delivery
of the specific type of financial  instrument at a specific future time at a 
specific price. The specific securities delivered or taken, respectively,  at 
settlement date, would not be  determined  until at or near that date.  The  
determination  would be in accordance with the rules of the exchange on which
the futures  contract sale or purchase was made.

         Although interest rate futures contracts by their terms call for actual
delivery or acceptance of securities, in most cases the contracts are closed out
before  the  settlement  date  without  the  making  or taking  of  delivery  of
securities.  Closing  out a futures  contract  sale is  effected  by the  Fund's
entering into a futures  contract  purchase for the same aggregate amount of the
specific type of financial  instrument  and the same delivery date. If the price
in the sale exceeds the price in the offsetting  purchase,  the Fund is paid the
difference  and thus realizes a gain. If the  offsetting  purchase price exceeds
the sale price, the Fund pays the difference and realizes a loss. Similarly, the
closing out of a futures  contract  purchase is effected by the Fund's  entering
into a futures  contract sale. If the offsetting sale price exceeds the purchase
price,  the  Fund  realizes  a  gain,  and if the  purchase  price  exceeds  the
offsetting sale price, the Fund realizes a loss.

         Interest rate futures contracts are traded in an auction environment on
the floors of several  exchanges - principally,  the Chicago Board of Trade, the
Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the New York Futures Exchange. A Fund would deal
only in standardized  contracts on recognized changes.  Each exchange guarantees
performance  under  contract  provisions  through  a  clearing  corporation,   a
nonprofit organization managed by the exchange membership.

         A public  market  now  exists in  futures  contracts  covering  various
financial  instruments  including  long-term  United States  Treasury  Bonds and
Notes;  Government  National Mortgage  Association (GNMA) modified  pass-through
mortgage-backed  securities;  three-month  United  States  Treasury  Bills;  and
ninety-day  commercial  paper.  The Funds may trade in any futures  contract for
which there exists a public market, including, without limitation, the foregoing
instruments.

         Examples of Futures  Contract  Sale. A Fund would engage in an interest
rate futures  contract  sale to maintain  the income  advantage  from  continued
holding of a long-term  bond while  endeavoring to avoid part or all of the loss
in market value that would otherwise accompany a decline in long-term securities
prices.  Assume that the market  value of a certain  security in a Fund tends to
move in concert  with the  futures  market  prices of  long-term  United  States
Treasury bonds ("Treasury Bonds").  The investment adviser ("Adviser") wishes to
fix the current market value of this portfolio  security until some point in the
future. Assume the portfolio security has a market value of 100, and the Adviser
believes that,  because of an anticipated rise in interest rates, the value will
decline to 95. The Fund might  enter into  futures  contract  sales of  Treasury
bonds for an equivalent  of 98. If the market value of the portfolio  securities
does indeed decline from 100 to 95, the equivalent  futures market price for the
Treasury bonds might also decline from 98 to 93.

         In that case, the five-point  loss in the market value of the portfolio
security  would be offset by the  five-point  gain  realized  by closing out the
futures  contract  sale. Of course,  the

                                      B-2
<PAGE>

futures  market price of Treasury bonds might well  decline to more than 93 or
to less than 93 because of the  imperfect correlation between cash and futures
prices mentioned below.

         The Adviser  could be wrong in its  forecast of interest  rates and the
equivalent  futures  market price could rise above 98. In this case,  the market
value of the  portfolio  securities,  including  the  portfolio  security  being
protected,  would increase. The benefit of this increase would be reduced by the
loss realized on closing out the futures contract sale.

         If interest  rate levels did not change,  the Fund in the above example
might  incur a loss  of 2  points  (which  might  be  reduced  by an  offsetting
transaction  prior to the settlement  date).  In each  transaction,  transaction
expenses would also be incurred.

         Examples  of  Future  Contract  Purchase.  A Fund  would  engage  in an
interest  rate  futures  contract  purchase  when it is not  fully  invested  in
long-term  bonds but wishes to defer for a time the purchase of long-term  bonds
in  light  of  the  availability  of  advantageous  interim  investments,  e.g.,
shorter-term  securities  whose  yields  are  greater  than those  available  on
long-term bonds. The Fund's basic motivation would be to maintain for a time the
income advantage from investing in the short-term securities;  the Fund would be
endeavoring  at the  same  time to  eliminate  the  effect  of all or part of an
expected  increase  in market  price of the  long-term  bonds  that the Fund may
purchase.

         For example,  assume that the market price of a long-term bond that the
Fund may purchase, currently yielding 10%, tends to move in concert with futures
market prices of Treasury  bonds.  The Adviser  wishes to fix the current market
price (and thus 10%  yield) of the  long-term  bond until the time (four  months
away in this example) when it may purchase the bond.  Assume the long-term  bond
has a  market  price  of 100,  and the  Adviser  believes  that,  because  of an
anticipated  fall in interest  rates,  the price will have risen to 105 (and the
yield will have dropped to about  9-1/2%) in four  months.  The Fund might enter
into futures  contracts  purchases of Treasury bonds for an equivalent  price of
98. At the same time,  the Fund would assign a pool of investments in short-term
securities that are either maturing in four months or earmarked for sale in four
months,  for purchase of the long-term  bond at an assumed  market price of 100.
Assume these short-term  securities are yielding 15%. If the market price of the
long-term bond does indeed rise from 100 to 105, the  equivalent  futures market
price for  Treasury  bonds  might also rise from 98 to 103.  In that  case,  the
5-point increase in the price that the Fund pays for the long-term bond would be
offset  by the  5-point  gain  realized  by  closing  out the  futures  contract
purchase.

         The Adviser could be wrong in its forecast of interest rates; long-term
interest rates might rise to above 10%; and the equivalent  futures market price
could fall below 98. If short-term  rates at the same time fall to 10% or below,
it is  possible  that the Fund would  continue  with its  purchase  program  for
long-term  bonds.  The market  price of  available  long-term  bonds  would have
decreased.  The benefit of this price decrease, and thus yield increase, will be
reduced by the loss realized on closing out the futures contract purchase.

         If, however, short-term rates remained above available long-term rates,
it is  possible  that  the Fund  would  discontinue  its  purchase  program  for
long-term bonds. The yield on short-term

                                      B-3
<PAGE>

securities in the portfolio,  including those  originally in the pool assigned 
to the particular  long-term bond,  would remain  higher than yields on  
long-term  bonds.  The benefit of this  continued incremental  income  will
be reduced by the loss realized on closing out the futures contract purchase.

         In each transaction, expenses also would be incurred.

II.      Index Futures Contracts.

         A stock or bond index  assigns  relative  values to the stocks or bonds
included  in the  index,  and the index  fluctuates  with  changes in the market
values of the stocks or bonds included.  Some stock index futures  contracts are
based on broad market indices, such as the Standard & Poor's 500 or the Exchange
Composite  Index.  In contract,  certain  exchanges  offer futures  contracts on
narrower  market  indices,  such as the  Standard & Poor's  100,  the Bond Buyer
Municipal  Bond  Index,  an  index  composed  of 40  term  revenue  and  general
obligation bonds, or indices based on an industry or market segment, such as oil
and gas stocks. Futures contracts are traded on organized exchanges regulated by
the Commodity  Futures  Trading  Commission.  Transactions on such exchanges are
cleared through a clearing corporation,  which guarantees the performance of the
parties to each contract.

         A Fund will sell index futures  contracts in order to offset a decrease
in market value of its portfolio  securities that might otherwise  result from a
market decline. The Fund may do so either to hedge the value of its portfolio as
a whole, or to protect against declines, occurring prior to sales of securities,
in the value of the  securities  to be sold.  Conversely,  a Fund will  purchase
index  futures  contracts  in  anticipation  of purchases  of  securities.  In a
substantial  majority  of  these  transactions,  the  Fund  will  purchase  such
securities  upon  termination of the long futures  position,  but a long futures
position may be terminated without a corresponding purchase of securities.

         In addition, a Fund may utilize index futures contracts in anticipation
of changes in the  composition of its portfolio  holdings.  For example,  in the
event that a Fund expects to narrow the range of industry groups  represented in
its  holdings  it may,  prior to  making  purchases  of the  actual  securities,
establish a long futures position based on a more restricted  index,  such as an
index  comprised of securities of a particular  industry  group. A Fund also may
sell futures  contracts in connection  with this  strategy,  in order to protect
against the  possibility  that the value of the securities to be sold as part of
the restructuring of the portfolio will decline prior to the time of sale.

         The following are examples of  transactions in stock index futures (net
of commissions and premiums, if any).

                                      B-4
<PAGE>


                   ANTICIPATORY PURCHASE HEDGE: Buy the Future

                Hedge Objection: Protect Against Increasing Price

         Portfolio                          Futures

                  -Day Hedge is Placed-

Anticipate Buying $62,500           Buying 1 Index Futures at 125

Equity Portfolio                    Value of Futures = $62,500/Contract

                  -Day Hedge is Lifted-

Buy Equity Portfolio with           Sell 1 Index Futures at 130

Actual Cost = $65,000               Value of Futures = $65,000/Contract

Increase in Purchase Price =$2,500          Gain on Futures = $2,500



                   HEDGING A STOCK PORTFOLIO: Sell the Future

                   Hedge Objective: Protect Against Declining

                             Value of the Portfolio

Factors:

Value of Stock Portfolio = $1,000,000

Value of Futures Contract = 125 x $500 = $62,500

Portfolio Beta Relative to the Index - 1.0

         Portfolio                          Futures

                  -Day Hedge is Placed --

Anticipate Selling $1,000,000               Sell 16 Index Futures at 125

  Equity Portfolio                  Value of Futures = $1,000,000

                  -Day Hedge is Lifted --

Equity Portfolio-Own                Buy 16 Index Futures at 120

  Stock with Value = $960,000               Value of Futures = $960,000


                                      B-5
<PAGE>


  Loss in Portfolio Value = $40,000         Gain on Futures = $40,000



         If,  however,  the market  moved in the  opposite  direction,  that is,
market value  decreased and the Fund had entered into an  anticipatory  purchase
hedge,  or market value  increased and the Fund had hedged its stock  portfolio,
the results of the Fund's  transactions  in stock index  futures would be as set
forth below.

                   ANTICIPATORY PURCHASE HEDGE: Buy the Future

                Hedge Objective: Protect Against Increasing Price

         Portfolio                          Futures

                  -Day Hedge is Placed--

Anticipate Buying $62,500           Buying 1 Index Futures at 125

   Equity Portfolio                 Value of Futures = $62,500/Contract

                  -Day Hedge is Lifted--

Buy Equity Portfolio with           Sell 1 Index Futures at 120

   Actual Cost - $60,000            Value of Futures = $60,000/Contract

   Decrease in Purchase Price = $2,500         Loss on Futures = $2,500/Contract

                   HEDGING A STOCK PORTFOLIO: Sell the Future

                   Hedge Objective: Protect Against Declining

                                              Value of the Portfolio

Factors:

Value of Stock Portfolio = $1,000,000

Value of Futures Contract = 125 x $500 = $62,500

Portfolio Beta Relative to the Index = 1.0

         Portfolio                          Futures

                  -Day Hedge is Placed --

Anticipate Selling $1,000,000               Sell 16 Index Futures at 125

                                      B-6
<PAGE>

         Equity Portfolio           Value of Futures = $1,000,000

                           -Day Hedge is Lifted --

Equity Portfolio-Own                Buy 16 Index Futures at 130

         Stock with Value = $1,040,000           Value of Futures = $1,040,000

         Gain in Portfolio = $40,000             Loss of Futures = $40,000

III.     Margin Payments.

         Unlike when a Fund  purchases or sells a security,  no price is paid or
received by the Fund upon the purchase or sale of a futures contract. Initially,
the Fund will be required to deposit with the broker or in a segregated  account
with the Fund's Custodian an amount of cash or cash  equivalents,  the value, of
which  may  vary  but is  generally  equal  to 10% or less of the  value  of the
contract.  This amount is known as initial margin.  The nature of initial margin
in  futures   transactions   is  different  from  that  of  margin  in  security
transactions  in that futures  contract margin does not involve the borrowing of
funds by the customer to finance the transactions. Rather, the initial margin is
in the nature of a performance  bond or good faith deposit on the contract which
is returned to the Fund upon  termination of the futures  contract  assuming all
contractual  obligations  have  been  satisfied.   Subsequent  payments,  called
variation margin,  to and from the broker,  will be made on a daily basis as the
price of the underlying  security or index fluctuates  making the long and short
positions in the futures  contract  more or less  valuable,  a process  known as
marking to the market. For example, when a Fund has purchased a futures contract
and the price of the contract has risen in response to a rise in the  underlying
instruments,  that  position  will have  increased in value and the Fund will be
entitled to receive  from the broker a variation  margin  payment  equal to that
increase in value. Conversely, where a Fund has purchased a futures contract and
the price of the futures  contract has declined in response to a decrease in the
underlying instruments,  the position would be less valuable, and the Fund would
be required to make a variation margin payment to the broker.  At any time prior
to  expiration  of the  futures  contract,  the  Adviser  may elect to close the
position  by taking an  opposite  position,  subject  to the  availability  of a
secondary  market,  which will operate to terminate  the Fund's  position in the
futures  contract.  A final  determination  of  variation  margin is then  made,
additional  cash is required to be paid by or released to the Fund, and the Fund
realizes a loss or gain.

IV.      Risks of Transactions in Futures Contracts.

         There are several risks in connection with the use of futures by a Fund
as a hedging  device.  One risk  arises  because  of the  imperfect  correlation
between  movements in the price of the future and  movements in the price of the
securities  which are the subject of the hedge. The price of the future may move
more than or less than the price of the securities being hedged. If the price of
the future moves less than the price of the securities  which are the subject of
the  hedge,  the  hedge  will not be fully  effective  but,  if the price of the
securities being hedged has moved in an unfavorable direction, the Fund would be
in a better  position  than if it had not  hedged  at all.  If the  price of the
securities being hedged has moved in a favorable direction, this

                                      B-7

<PAGE>


advance will be partially  offset by the loss on the  future.  If the price of 
the future  moves more than the price of the hedged securities,  the Fund 
involved will experience either a loss or gain on the  future  which  will
not be  completely  offset  by movements in the price of the securities 
which are the subject of the hedge.

         To compensate  for the imperfect  correlation of movements in the price
of securities  being hedged and movements in the price of futures  contracts,  a
Fund may buy or sell  futures  contracts  in a greater  dollar  amount  than the
dollar amount of  securities  being hedged if the  volatility  over a particular
time  period  of the  prices  of such  securities  has  been  greater  than  the
volatility  over such time period of the future,  or if  otherwise  deemed to be
appropriate  by the Adviser.  Conversely,  a Fund may buy or sell fewer  futures
contracts if the volatility  over a particular  time period of the prices of the
securities being hedged is less than the volatility over such time period of the
futures  contract  being used, or if otherwise  deemed to be  appropriate by the
Adviser.  It also is possible  that,  where a Fund has sold futures to hedge its
portfolio against a decline in the market, the market may advance, and the value
of securities  held by the Fund may decline.  If this  occurred,  the Fund would
lose money on the future and also experience a decline in value in its portfolio
securities.

         Where futures are purchased to hedge against a possible increase in the
price  of  securities  before  a Fund  is able  to  invest  its  cash  (or  cash
equivalents)  in securities (or options) in an orderly  fashion,  it is possible
that the market may decline instead; if the Fund then concludes not to invest in
securities  or options at that time  because of concern as to  possible  further
market decline or for other reasons, the Fund will realize a loss on the futures
contract that is not offset by a reduction in the price of securities purchased.

         In instances  involving the purchase of futures contracts by a Fund, an
amount of cash and cash  equivalents,  equal to the market  value of the futures
contracts,  will be deposited in a segregated  account with the Fund's Custodian
and/or in a margin  account  with a broker to  collateralize  the  position  and
thereby insure that the use of such futures is unleveraged.

         In  addition  to  the  possibility  that  there  may  be  an  imperfect
correlation,  or no correlation at all, between movements in the futures and the
securities being hedged,  the price of futures may not correlate  perfectly with
movement  in the cash  market due to certain  market  distortions.  Rather  than
meeting  additional  margin  deposit  requirements,  investors may close futures
contracts  through  off-setting  transactions  which  could  distort  the normal
relationship  between  the cash and futures  markets.  Second,  with  respect to
financial  futures  contracts,  the liquidity of the futures  market  depends on
participants entering into off-setting transactions rather than making or taking
delivery. To the extent participants decide to make or take delivery,  liquidity
in the futures market could be reduced thus producing  distortions.  Third, from
the point of view of speculators, the deposit requirements in the futures market
are less onerous than margin  requirements in the securities market.  Therefore,
increased  participation  by  speculators  in the futures  market may also cause
temporary price  distortions.  Due to the possibility of price distortion in the
futures market, and because of the imperfect  correlation  between the movements
in the cash market and movements in the price of futures,  a correct forecast of
general  market trends or interest  rate  movements by the Adviser still may not
result in a successful hedging transaction over a short time frame.

                                      B-8
<PAGE>


         Positions  in futures may be closed out only on an exchange or board of
trade which  provides a secondary  market for such  futures.  Although the Funds
intend to purchase or sell  futures  only on  exchanges or boards of trade where
there appear to be active secondary markets, there is no assurance that a liquid
secondary market on any exchange or board of trade will exist for any particular
contract or at any  particular  time.  In such event,  it may not be possible to
close  a  futures  investment  position,  and  in the  event  of  adverse  price
movements,  a Fund would  continue to be required to make daily cash payments of
variation  margin.  However,  in the event futures  contracts  have been used to
hedge portfolio  securities,  such securities will not be sold until the futures
contract can be terminated.  In such circumstances,  an increase in the price of
the securities, if any, may partially or completely offset losses on the futures
contract.  However,  as described above, there is no guarantee that the price of
the securities  will in fact  correlate with the price  movements in the futures
contract and thus provide an offset on a futures contract.

         Further, it should be noted that the liquidity of a secondary market in
a futures contract may be adversely affected by "daily price fluctuation limits"
established  by commodity  exchanges  which limit the amount of fluctuation in a
futures  contract  price during a single  trading day.  Once the daily limit has
been  reached in the  contract,  no trades may be entered into at a price beyond
the limit, thus preventing the liquidation of open futures positions.

         Successful  use of futures  by a Fund also is subject to the  Adviser's
ability to predict  correctly  movements  in the  direction  of the market.  For
example, if a Fund has hedged against the possibility of a decline in the market
adversely  affecting  securities  held in its  portfolio and  securities  prices
increase instead, the Fund will lose part or all of the benefit to the increased
value of its  securities  which it has hedged  because  it will have  offsetting
losses in its futures positions.  In addition,  in such situations,  if the Fund
has  insufficient  cash, it may have to sell  securities to meet daily variation
margin  requirements.  Such sales of securities may be, but will not necessarily
be, at increased prices which reflect the rising market. A Fund may have to sell
securities at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so.

V.       Options on Futures Contracts.

         The Funds may  purchase  options  on the  futures  contracts  described
above.  A futures  option gives the holder,  in return for the premium paid, the
right to buy  (call)  from or sell  (put) to the  writer of the option a futures
contract at a specified price at any time during the period of the option.  Upon
exercise,  the writer of the option is obligated to pay the  difference  between
the cash value of the futures contract and the exercise price. Like the buyer or
seller of a futures contract,  the holder, or writer, of an option has the right
to terminate  its position  prior to the  scheduled  expiration of the option by
selling,  or purchasing,  an option of the same series, at which time the person
entering into the closing transaction will realize a gain or loss.

         Investments in futures options involve some of the same  considerations
that are involved in  connection  with  investments  in futures  contracts  (for
example, the existence of a liquid secondary market). In addition,  the purchase
of an option also entails the risk that  changes in the value of the  underlying
futures  contract  will  not be  fully  reflected  in the  value  of the  option
purchased. Depending on the pricing of the option compared to either the futures
contract  upon  which it is  based,  or upon the price of the  securities  being
hedged,  an option may or may not be

                                      B-9
<PAGE>


less risky than  ownership  of the  futures contract or such  securities.  In 
general,  the market  prices of options can be expected to be more volatile than
the market  prices on the  underlying  futures contract.  Compared to the 
purchase or sale of futures contracts,  however,  the purchase of call or 
put options on futures contracts may frequently involve less potential  risk 
to a Fund because the maximum amount at risk is the premium paid for  the  
options  (plus  transaction   costs).   Although  permitted  by  their 
fundamental  investment  policies,  the Funds do not  currently intend to write
future options, and will not do so in the future absent any necessary
regulatory approvals.

VI.      Accounting and Tax Treatment.

         Accounting for futures contracts and options will be in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles.
         Generally, futures contracts and options on futures contracts held by a
Fund at the close of the Fund's  taxable year will be treated for Federal income
tax  purposes as sold for their fair market  value on the last  business  day of
such year, a process  known as  "marking-to-market."  Forty percent (40%) of any
gains  or  loss  resulting  from  such  constructive  sale  will be  treated  as
short-term  capital  gain or loss and sixty  percent  (60%) of such gain or loss
will be treated as long-term  capital gain or loss without  regard to the length
of time the Fund holds the futures contract or option (the "40%-60% rule").  The
amount of any capital gain or loss  actually  realized by a Fund in a subsequent
sale or other disposition of those futures contracts will be adjusted to reflect
any  capital  gain or loss taken  into  account by the Fund in a prior year as a
result of the  constructive  sale of the contracts and options.  With respect to
futures contracts to sell or options which will be regarded as parts of a "mixed
straddle"  because  their values  fluctuate  inversely to the values of specific
securities held by the Fund, losses as to such contracts to sell or options will
be  subject  to  certain  loss  deferral  rules  which  limit the amount of loss
currently  deductible on either part of the straddle to the amount thereof which
exceeds  the  unrecognized  gain (if any) with  respect to the other part of the
straddle, and to certain wash sales regulations.  Under short sales rules, which
also will be applicable,  the holding  period of the securities  forming part of
the straddle will (if they have not been held for the long-term  holding period)
be deemed not to begin prior to  termination  of the  straddle.  With respect to
certain  futures  contracts  and options,  deductions  for interest and carrying
charges will not be allowed.  Notwithstanding  the rules described  above,  with
respect to futures  contracts to sell which are properly  identified as such and
certain  options,  a Fund may make an election which will except (in whole or in
part) those  identified  futures  contracts  or options  from being  treated for
Federal  income  tax  purposes  as sold on the last  business  day of the Fund's
taxable  year,  but gains and losses will be subject to such short  sales,  wash
sales,  loss  deferral  rules and the  requirement  to  capitalize  interest and
carrying charges. Under temporary regulations,  a Fund would be allowed (in lieu
of the  foregoing)  to elect to either (1) offset gains or losses from  portions
which are part of a mixed straddle by separately identifying each mixed straddle
to which such treatment  applies,  or (2) establish a mixed straddle account for
which gains and losses would be recognized and offset on a periodic basis during
the taxable year. Under either election,  the 40%-60% rule will apply to the net
gain or loss attributable to the futures  contracts,  but in the case of a mixed
straddle account  election,  not more than 50% of any net gain may be treated as
long-term and not more than 40% of any net loss may be treated as short-term.

                                      B-10
<PAGE>

         Certain  foreign  currency  contracts  entered  into  by a Fund  may be
subject to the  "marking-to-market"  process  and the  40%-60%  rule in a manner
similar to that described in the preceding  paragraph for futures  contracts and
options on futures  contracts.  To receive such Federal income tax treatment,  a
foreign currency contract must meet the following  conditions:  (1) the contract
must require delivery of a foreign currency of a type in which regulated futures
contracts are traded or upon which the settlement value of the contract depends;
(2) the contract  must be entered into at arm's length at a price  determined by
reference to the price in the  interbank  market;  and (3) the contract  must be
traded in the interbank market.  The Treasury  Department has broad authority to
issue regulations under the provisions  respecting  foreign currency  contracts.
Other  foreign  currency  contracts  entered  into by a Fund may  result  in the
creation of one or more straddles for Federal income tax purposes, in which case
certain loss deferral,  short sales, and wash sales rules and the requirement to
capitalize interest and carrying charges may apply.

         As described  more full in the section of the SAI entitled  "Additional
Information  Concerning  Taxes," in order to qualify as a  regulated  investment
company under the Code a Fund must derive less than 30% of its gross income from
investments held for less than three months.  With respect to futures  contracts
and other financial  instruments  subject to the  marking-to-market  rules,  the
Internal  Revenue  Service  has  ruled in  private  letter  rulings  that a gain
realized from such a futures contract or financial instrument will be treated as
being derived from a security held for three months or more  (regardless  of the
actual  period for which the contract or  instrument is held) if the gain arises
as a result of a constructive sale under the  marking-to-market  rules, and will
be treated as being derived from a security held for less than three months only
if the contract or instrument is terminated (or transferred)  during the taxable
year (other than by reason of marking-to-market) and less than three months have
elapsed  between  the  date the  contract  or  instrument  is  acquired  and the
termination date. In determining whether the 30% test is met for a taxable year,
increases and decreases in the value of each Fund's futures  contracts and other
investments  that  qualify  as part of a  "designated  hedge," as defined in the
Code, may be netted.

                                      B-11

<PAGE>


                                   SCHEDULE C

                        ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONCERNING

                           MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES



Mortgage-Backed Securities

         Mortgage-backed securities represent an ownership interest in a pool of
residential  mortgage  loans.  These  securities are designed to provide monthly
payments of interest and  principal to the  investor.  The  mortgagor's  monthly
payments to his/her  lending  institution are  "passed-through"  to an investor.
Most issuers or poolers provide guarantees of payments, regardless of whether or
not the mortgagor actually makes the payment.  The guarantees made by issuers or
poolers are  supported by various  forms of credit,  collateral,  guarantees  or
insurance, including individual loan, title, pool and hazard insurance purchased
by the issuer. There can be no assurance that the private issuers or poolers can
meet their obligations under the policies.  Mortgage-backed securities issued by
private  issuers or  poolers,  whether  or not such  securities  are  subject to
guarantees,  may entail  greater  risk than  securities  directly or  indirectly
guaranteed by the U.S. Government.

         Interests  in pools of  mortgage-backed  securities  differ  from other
forms of debt  securities,  which  normally  provide  for  periodic  payment  of
interest in fixed amounts with principal  payments at maturity or specified call
dates.  Instead,  these  securities  provide a monthly payment which consists of
both  interest  and  principal  payments.   In  effect,  these  payments  are  a
"pass-through" of the monthly payments made by the individual borrowers on their
residential mortgage loans, net of any fees paid. Additional payments are caused
by repayments  resulting from the sale of the underlying  residential  property,
refinancing  or  foreclosure  net of fees or costs which may be  incurred.  Some
mortgage-backed  securities  are  described  as "modified  pass-through."  These
securities  entitle the holders to receive all interest and  principal  payments
owed on the mortgages in the pool, net of certain fees, regardless of whether or
not the mortgagors actually make the payments.

         Residential mortgage loans are pooled by the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation (FHLMC). FHLMC is a corporate instrumentality of the U.S. Government
and  was  created  by  Congress  in 1970  for  the  purpose  of  increasing  the
availability of mortgage credit for residential  housing.  Its stock is owned by
the twelve  Federal  Home Loan Banks.  FHLMC issues  Participation  Certificates
("PC's"),   which  represent   interests  in  mortgages  from  FHLMC's  national
portfolio.  FHLMC  guarantees  the  timely  payment  of  interest  and  ultimate
collection of principal.

         The  Federal  National  Mortgage  Association  (FNMA)  is a  Government
sponsored corporation owned entirely by private  stockholders.  It is subject to
general  regulation  by the  Secretary  of Housing and Urban  Development.  FNMA
purchases residential mortgages from a list of approved  sellers/servicers which
include  state and  federally-chartered  savings and loan

                                      C-1
<PAGE>

associations,  mutual savings  banks,  commercial  banks  and  credit  unions  
and  mortgage  bankers. Pass-through  securities  issued by FNMA are  guaranteed
as to timely payment of principal and interest by FNMA.

         The principal Government guarantor of mortgage-backed securities is the
Government  National Mortgage  Association  (GNMA).  GNMA is a wholly-owned U.S.
Government  corporation  within the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
GNMA is  authorized  to  guarantee,  with the full  faith and credit of the U.S.
Government, the timely payment of principal and interest on securities issued by
approved  institutions  and  backed  by pools of  FHA-insured  or  VA-guaranteed
mortgages.

         Commercial  banks,  savings  and loan  institutions,  private  mortgage
insurance  companies,  mortgage  bankers and other secondary market issuers also
create  pass-through  pools of conventional  residential  mortgage loans.  Pools
created  by such  non-governmental  issuers  generally  offer a  higher  rate of
interest  than  Government  and  Government-related  pools  because there are no
direct or  indirect  Government  guarantees  of  payments  in the former  pools.
However, timely payment of interest and principal of these pools is supported by
various forms of insurance or guarantees, including individual loan, title, pool
and hazard insurance  purchased by the issuer.  The insurance and guarantees are
issued by Governmental  entities,  private  insurers,  and the mortgage poolers.
There can be no assurance that the private insurers or mortgage poolers can meet
their obligations under the policies.

         The Fund  expects  that  Governmental  or private  entities  may create
mortgage  loan pools  offering  pass-through  investments  in  addition to those
described  above.  The mortgages  underlying these securities may be alternative
mortgage instruments,  that is, mortgage instruments whose principal or interest
payment  may vary or whose  terms to  maturity  may be shorter  than  previously
customary. As new types of mortgage-backed  securities are developed and offered
to investors, certain Funds will, consistent with their investment objective and
policies, consider making investments in such new types of securities.

Underlying Mortgages

         Pools consist of whole mortgage loans or  participations  in loans. The
majority of these loans are made to purchasers  of 1-4 family  homes.  The terms
and  characteristics of the mortgage  instruments are generally uniform within a
pool  but may  vary  among  pools.  For  example,  in  addition  to  fixed-rate,
fixed-term  mortgages,  a Fund may  purchase  pools of  variable-rate  mortgages
(VRM),  growing equity mortgages (GEM),  graduated  payment  mortgages (GPM) and
other types where the principal and interest payment  procedures vary. VRM's are
mortgages which reset the mortgage's  interest rate periodically with changes in
open market interest rates. To the extent that the Fund is actually  invested in
VRM's,  the Fund's  interest  income  will vary with  changes in the  applicable
interest rate on pools of VRM's.  GPM and GEM pools maintain  constant  interest
rates, with varying levels of principal repayment over the life of the mortgage.
These different  interest and principal payment procedures should not impact the
Fund's net asset  value since the prices at which  these  securities  are valued
will reflect the payment procedures.

                                      C-2
<PAGE>

         All  poolers  apply  standards  for   qualification  to  local  lending
institutions  which  originate  mortgages for the pools.  Poolers also establish
credit standards and underwriting  criteria for individual mortgages included in
the pools.  In addition,  some mortgages  included in pools are insured  through
private mortgage insurance companies.

Average Life

         The average life of  pass-through  pools varies with the  maturities of
the underlying mortgage instruments. In addition, a pool's term may be shortened
by  unscheduled  or early  payments of principal and interest on the  underlying
mortgages.  The  occurrence  of  mortgage  prepayments  is  affected  by factors
including the level of interest rates, general economic conditions, the location
and age of the mortgage, and other social and demographic conditions.

         As prepayment rates of individual pools vary widely, it is not possible
to  accurately  predict  the average  life of a  particular  pool.  For pools of
fixed-rated  30-year  mortgages,  common  industry  practice  is to assume  that
prepayments will result in a 12-year average life. Pools of mortgages with other
maturities  or  different  characteristics  will have  varying  assumptions  for
average life.

Returns on Mortgage-Backed Securities

         Yields on mortgage-backed  pass-through securities are typically quoted
based on the maturity of the underlying  instruments and the associated  average
life assumption. Actual prepayment experience may cause the yield to differ from
the assumed average life yield.

         Reinvestment of prepayments may occur at higher or lower interest rates
than the  original  investment,  thus  affecting  the  yields of the  Fund.  The
compounding  effect from  reinvestments of monthly payments received by the Fund
will  increase  its yield to  shareholders,  compared to bonds that pay interest
semi-annually.

                                      C-3
<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)

                                                                                        VALUE
      SHARES                                                                          (NOTE 1)
================================================================================================
COMMON STOCKS - 89.2%
<S>            <C>                                                                     <C>
               AEROSPACE AND DEFENSE - 1.9%
  2,000        Boeing Company .........................................................$214,250
    700        EG&G Inc. ..............................................................  14,875
    300        General Dynamics Corporation............................................  21,187
  1,200        Lockheed Martin Corporation ............................................ 110,400
  1,300        McDonnell Douglas Corporation ..........................................  87,425
    300        Northrop Grumman Corporation ...........................................  23,438
  1,700        Raytheon Company .......................................................  77,987
  1,100        TRW Inc. ...............................................................  55,825
  1,600        United Technologies Corporation ........................................ 111,600
                                                                                        --------
                                                                                        716,987
                                                                                        --------
               APPAREL AND TEXTILES - 0.6%
    800        Fruit of the Loom Inc., Class A +.......................................  32,100
    800        Liz Claiborne Inc. .....................................................  33,700
  1,600        Nike Inc., Class B ..................................................... 108,600
    600        Russell Corporation ....................................................  19,350
    300        Springs Industries Inc. ................................................  12,675
    300        V.F. Corporation .......................................................  19,950
                                                                                        --------
                                                                                        226,375
                                                                                        --------
               AUTOMOBILE AND TRUCK MANUFACTURERS - 2.1%
  5,600        Chrysler Corporation ................................................... 195,300
  7,100        Ford Motor Company ..................................................... 228,088
  4,900        General Motors Corporation ............................................. 289,100
    600        ITT Industries Inc. ....................................................  15,150
    700        Paccar, Inc. ...........................................................  45,763
                                                                                        --------
                                                                                        773,401
                                                                                        --------
               AUTOMOBILE PARTS MANUFACTURERS - 0.5%
    800        Dana Corporation .......................................................  26,100
    500        Eaton Corporation ......................................................  35,000
    700        Echlin Inc. ............................................................  21,088
    800        Genuine Parts Company ..................................................  35,300
    900        Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company .........................................  49,050
    300        Snap-On Inc. ...........................................................  11,175
                                                                                        --------
                                                                                        177,713
                                                                                        --------
               BANKS - 7.2%
  2,700        Banc One Corporation.................................................... 122,513
  2,300        BankAmerica Corporation................................................. 256,738
  1,200        Bank of Boston Corporation..............................................  85,500
  2,700        Bank of New York Inc. ..................................................  98,887
    500        Bankers Trust N.Y. Corporation..........................................  42,500
  1,600        Barnett Banks Inc. .....................................................  70,400
  2,700        Chase Manhattan Corporation ............................................ 249,750
  2,800        Citicorp ............................................................... 325,850
    900        Comerica Inc. ..........................................................  51,412
  1,200        CoreStates Financial Corporation........................................  59,700
    300        Fifth Third Bancorp.....................................................  23,212
    800        First Bank System, Inc. ................................................  60,800
  2,000        First Chicago Corporation NBD........................................... 114,250
  1,900        First Union Corporation ................................................ 158,887
  1,400        Fleet Financial Group Inc. .............................................  75,600
  1,300        KeyCorp.................................................................  68,087
    900        Mellon Bank Corporation ................................................  67,162
  1,100        Morgan (J.P.) & Company Inc. ........................................... 113,300
  1,300        National City Corporation ..............................................  58,988

</TABLE>
                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                               JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)

                                                                                                   VALUE
   SHARES                                                                                        (NOTE 1)
==========================================================================================================
COMMON STOCKS - (CONTINUED)
                 BANKS - (CONTINUED)
<S>              <C>                                                                            <C>
    2,400        Norwest Corporation ...........................................................$  114,300
    2,400        PNC Bank Corporation...........................................................    95,400
      500        Republic New York Corporation .................................................    44,313
    1,300        SunTrust Banks Inc. ...........................................................    65,000
      900        U.S. Bancorp ..................................................................    41,006
      900        Wachovia Corporation...........................................................    51,862
      500        Wells Fargo & Company .........................................................   152,375
                                                                                                 ---------
                                                                                                 2,667,792
                                                                                                 ---------
                 BEVERAGES - 2.9%
    1,900        Anheuser-Busch Companies, Inc. ................................................    80,750
      100        Brown-Forman Corporation, Class B .............................................     4,400
   13,100        Coca-Cola Company .............................................................   758,163
    6,500        PepsiCo Inc. ..................................................................   226,687
                                                                                                 ---------
                                                                                                 1,070,000
                                                                                                 ---------
                 BIO SPECIALTY PHARMACEUTICALS - 0.2%
    1,600        Amgen Inc. + ..................................................................    90,200
                                                                                                 ---------

                 CHEMICALS - BASIC - 2.2%
      700        Air Products & Chemicals Inc. .................................................    49,962
    1,500        Dow Chemical Company ..........................................................   115,688
    3,400        du Pont (E.I.) de Nemours & Company ...........................................   372,725
      500        Eastman Chemical Company.......................................................    27,312
      200        Ecolab Inc. ...................................................................     7,400
      200        FMC Corporation+...............................................................    14,025
      300        Goodrich (B.F.) Company .......................................................    12,300
      500        Mallinckrodt Group Inc. .......................................................    20,500
      300        Monsanto Company ..............................................................    11,363
      100        Nalco Chemical Company ........................................................     3,550
    1,200        PPG Industries, Inc. ..........................................................    64,200
      900        Praxair Inc. ..................................................................    41,737
      500        Rohm & Haas Company ...........................................................    41,000
      900        Union Carbide Corporation .....................................................    40,838
                                                                                                 ---------
                                                                                                   822,600
                                                                                                 ---------
                 CHEMICALS - SPECIALTY - 0.2%
      600        Avery Dennison Corporation ....................................................    21,975
      200        Great Lakes Chemical Corporation...............................................     8,625
      900        Morton International Inc., Industries .........................................    36,562
                                                                                                 ---------
                                                                                                    67,162
                                                                                                 ---------
                 COAL, GAS AND PIPELINE - 0.5%
      800        Coastal Corporation ...........................................................    38,700
       47        El Paso Natural Gas............................................................     2,505
    1,200        Enron Corporation .............................................................    49,500
      700        ENSERCH Corporation ...........................................................    15,925
    1,200        PanEnergy Corporation..........................................................    55,350
    1,100        Santa Fe Energy Resources .....................................................    16,362
                                                                                                ----------
                                                                                                   178,342
                                                                                                ----------
</TABLE>



                      See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)

                                                                                                    VALUE
    SHARES                                                                                         (NOTE 1)
============================================================================================================================
COMMON STOCKS - (CONTINUED)
                 COMPUTER RELATED - 4.6%
<S>              <C>                                                                              <C>
      200        Ceridian Corporation + ........................................................  $   7,550
    3,000        cisco Systems, Inc. +..........................................................    209,250
    1,900        COMPAQ Computer Corporation +..................................................    165,063
    2,000        Data General Corporation + ....................................................     37,750
    1,100        Dell Computer Corporation +....................................................     72,738
    1,200        Digital Equipment Corporation + ...............................................     45,000
    1,600        EMC Corporation +..............................................................     60,600
    6,000        Hewlett-Packard Company .......................................................    315,750
      700        Honeywell, Inc. ...............................................................     50,487
    3,200        International Business Machines Corporation ...................................    503,200
      550        NCR Corporation+ ..............................................................     20,831
    1,800        Seagate Technology +...........................................................     92,700
    2,300        Sun Microsystems Inc. +........................................................     73,025
      900        3Com Corporation + ............................................................     60,413
      800        Tandem Computers Inc. + .......................................................     11,100
                                                                                                 ----------
                                                                                                  1,725,457
                                                                                                 ----------
                 COMPUTER SERVICES - 0.4%
      800        Automatic Data Processing Inc. ................................................     33,100
    2,100        Computer Associates International Inc. ........................................     95,287
      200        Computer Sciences Corporation+ ................................................     14,150
                                                                                                 ----------
                                                                                                    142,537
                                                                                                 ----------
                 COMPUTER SOFTWARE - 2.1%
    6,600        Microsoft Corporation + .......................................................    673,200
    2,700        Oracle Systems Corporation +...................................................    104,963
                                                                                                 ----------
                                                                                                    778,163
                                                                                                 ----------
                 CONSTRUCTION - 0.6%
      700        Case Corporation ..............................................................     37,100
    1,000        Centex Corporation ............................................................     39,000
      700        Crane Company .................................................................     23,100
      500        Fluor Corporation .............................................................     35,562
      900        Masco Corporation .............................................................     31,050
      300        Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corporation...........................................     13,950
      600        Pulte Corporation .............................................................     19,875
      300        Sherwin-Williams Company.......................................................     16,650
                                                                                                 ----------
                                                                                                    216,287
                                                                                                 ----------
                 CONTAINERS - 0.1%
      600        Crown Cork & Seal Inc. ........................................................     34,500
                                                                                                 ----------

                 COSMETICS AND TOILETRY - 1.5%
      100        Clorox Company.................................................................     11,863
    2,200        Gillette Company...............................................................    179,300
    3,300        Procter & Gamble Company ......................................................    381,150
                                                                                                 ----------
                                                                                                    572,313
                                                                                                 ----------
                 DIVERSIFIED - 1.4%
    1,600        AlliedSignal Inc. .............................................................    112,400
    1,100        Corning Inc. ..................................................................     39,187
    1,100        Loews Corporation .............................................................    108,762
    1,900        Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Company ......................................    161,975
      700        Tenneco Inc. ..................................................................     28,000
      500        Textron, Inc. .................................................................     48,688
      700        Whitman Corporation ...........................................................     16,100
                                                                                                 ----------
                                                                                                    515,112
                                                                                                 ----------
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)

                                                                                                   VALUE
   SHARES                                                                                         (NOTE 1)
===========================================================================================================
COMMON STOCKS - (CONTINUED)
                 DRUGS - 5.0%
<S>              <C>                                                                            <C>
    3,700        American Home Products Corporation............................................ $  234,488
    2,200        Bristol-Myers Squibb Company..................................................    279,400
    2,300        Lilly (Eli) & Company ........................................................    200,388
    6,800        Merck & Company Inc. .........................................................    617,100
    2,700        Pfizer, Inc. .................................................................    250,763
    2,300        Pharmacia & Upjohn Inc. ......................................................     85,675
    1,400        Schering-Plough Corporation...................................................    105,875
    1,100        Warner-Lambert Company .......................................................     88,550
                                                                                                ----------
                                                                                                 1,862,239
                                                                                                ----------
                 ELECTRIC POWER - 3.2%
    1,200        American Electric Power Inc. .................................................     49,650
    1,100        Baltimore Gas & Electric Company .............................................     30,250
    1,100        Carolina Power & Light Company ...............................................     41,387
    1,300        Central & South West Corporation .............................................     32,825
    1,100        CINergy Corporation...........................................................     37,950
    1,800        Consolidated Edison Company New York Inc. ....................................     55,800
    1,100        Dominion Resources Inc. ......................................................     43,587
      900        DTE Energy Company ...........................................................     28,237
    1,200        Duke Power Company ...........................................................     56,250
    3,700        Edison International .........................................................     79,088
    2,000        Entergy Corporation, New .....................................................     53,750
    1,200        FPL Group Inc. ...............................................................     53,100
    1,200        General Public Utilities Corporation..........................................     40,200
    1,600        Houston Industries Inc. ......................................................     36,200
    3,800        Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation+.............................................     38,475
      300        Northern States Power Corporation ............................................     13,837
    1,300        Ohio Edison Company ..........................................................     30,063
    2,800        Pacific Gas & Electric Company................................................     63,700
    2,000        PacifiCorp ...................................................................     42,500
    1,600        PECO Energy Company ..........................................................     36,800
    1,200        PP&L Resources Inc. ..........................................................     27,150
    1,600        Public Service Enterprise Group...............................................     43,800
    4,100        Southern Company .............................................................     89,688
    1,900        Texas Utilities Company ......................................................     76,950
    1,700        Unicom Corporation ...........................................................     40,163
      800        Union Electric Company .......................................................     30,400
                                                                                                ----------
                                                                                                 1,171,800
                                                                                                ----------
                 ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT - 3.1%
    1,300        Emerson Electric Company. ....................................................    128,375
    9,500        General Electric Company .....................................................    978,500
      200        Raychem Corporation ..........................................................    17,325
      300        Thomas & Betts Corporation ...................................................     14,062
                                                                                                ----------
                                                                                                 1,138,262
                                                                                                ----------
                 ELECTRONICS - 1.2%
      800        AMP Inc. .....................................................................     32,600
    1,300        Applied Materials Inc. + .....................................................     64,188
      400        Harris Corporation ...........................................................     30,450
      600        LSI Logic Corporation + ......................................................     20,850
    3,400        Motorola, Inc. ...............................................................    232,050
    1,900        National Semiconductor Corporation + .........................................     52,725
      300        Tektronix Inc. ...............................................................     14,887
                                                                                                ----------
                                                                                                   447,750
                                                                                                ----------
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)

                                                                                                     VALUE
    SHARES                                                                                          (NOTE 1)
============================================================================================================================
COMMON STOCKS - (CONTINUED)
                 ENVIRONMENTAL - 0.8%
<S>              <C>                                                                              <C>
    1,600        Browning-Ferris Industries Inc. ................................................ $   52,000
      400        Johnson Controls Inc. ..........................................................     34,400
    2,100        Laidlaw Inc., Class B...........................................................     27,300
      200        Millipore Corporation ..........................................................      8,550
    1,100        Safety-Kleen Corporation .......................................................     17,738
    1,100        Tyco International Ltd. ........................................................     62,838
    2,900        WMX Technologies Inc. ..........................................................    106,213
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     309,039
                                                                                                   ---------
                 EXPLORATION AND DRILLING - 0.3%
      900        Burlington Resources Inc. ......................................................     44,775
      300        Helmerich & Payne Inc. .........................................................     14,512
    1,500        Union Pacific Resources Group...................................................     42,563
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     101,850
                                                                                                   ---------
                 FINANCIAL SERVICES - 4.1%
    2,800        American Express Company........................................................    174,650
    1,100        American General Corporation ...................................................     43,862
      300        Beneficial Corporation .........................................................     20,175
    2,900        Dean Witter, Discover & Company ................................................    110,563
    7,200        Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation .........................................    217,800
    6,400        Federal National Mortgage Association ..........................................    252,800
      900        Green Tree Financial Corporation ...............................................     34,987
      700        Household International Inc. ...................................................     69,388
      500        Marsh & McLennan Companies Inc. ................................................     53,875
    2,350        MBNA Corporation ...............................................................     81,075
    1,100        Merrill Lynch & Company Inc. ...................................................     92,675
    1,200        Morgan Stanley Group, Inc. .....................................................     68,550
      800        Salomon Inc. ...................................................................     44,200
      500        Transamerica Corporation .......................................................     41,125
    3,800        Travelers Group Inc. ...........................................................    199,025
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                   1,504,750
                                                                                                   ---------
                 FOOD PRODUCERS - 1.5%
    3,500        Archer-Daniels-Midland Company .................................................     69,125
      800        Campbell Soup Company ..........................................................     66,400
    1,500        ConAgra Inc. ...................................................................     75,750
      700        CPC International Inc. .........................................................     53,813
      800        General Mills Inc. .............................................................     54,200
      900        Hershey Foods Corporation ......................................................     38,025
      300        Pioneer Hi-Bred International ..................................................     20,213
      500        Ralston-Purina Group............................................................     39,312
      100        Sara Lee Corporation ...........................................................      3,950
      900        Unilever N.V., ADR .............................................................    148,050
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     568,838
                                                                                                   ---------
                 FOOD RETAILERS - 0.5%
      800        Albertson's, Inc. ..............................................................     28,000
      900        American Stores Company.........................................................     37,800
    2,000        Fleming Companies Inc. .........................................................     32,250
      300        Giant Food Inc., Class A .......................................................      9,900
    1,200        Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Inc. ..............................................     37,500
      900        Kroger Company + ...............................................................     42,975
      500        Supervalu Inc. .................................................................     15,438
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     203,863
                                                                                                   ---------
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)

                                                                                                      VALUE
     SHARES                                                                                         (NOTE 1)
=============================================================================================================
COMMON STOCKS - (CONTINUED)
                 FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES - 0.3%
<S>              <C>                                                                              <C>
      200        Armstrong World Industries Inc. ................................................ $   14,200
      700        Black & Decker Corporation .....................................................     23,450
    1,100        Maytag Corporation .............................................................     22,550
      800        Newell Company .................................................................     26,400
      200        Whirlpool Corporation ..........................................................     10,175
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                      96,775
                                                                                                   ---------
                 INSURANCE - 3.2%
    1,100        Aetna Life & Casualty Company ..................................................     86,900
    2,700        Allstate Corporation ...........................................................    177,525
    2,700        American International Group, Inc. .............................................    327,038
    1,200        Chubb Corporation ..............................................................     65,400
      600        CIGNA Corporation ..............................................................     90,975
      400        Conseco Inc. ...................................................................     29,400
      500        General Re Corporation .........................................................     80,750
      700        ITT Hartford Group Inc. ........................................................     51,362
      700        Jefferson-Pilot Corporation ....................................................     41,300
      800        Lincoln National Corporation Ltd. ..............................................     42,900
      200        MBIA Inc. ......................................................................     19,225
      200        MGIC Investment Corporation.....................................................     14,750
      700        Providian Corporation ..........................................................     37,713
      900        SAFECO Corporation .............................................................     34,200
      500        St. Paul Companies Inc. ........................................................     31,250
      500        Torchmark Corporation ..........................................................     25,875
      300        UNUM Corporation ...............................................................     22,688
      900        USF&G Corporation ..............................................................     19,012
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                   1,198,263
                                                                                                   ---------
                 MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT - 1.3%
    1,300        Caterpillar Inc. ...............................................................    100,912
      800        Cooper Industries Inc. .........................................................     34,500
      200        Cummins Engine Inc. ............................................................     10,525
    1,600        Deere & Company ................................................................     68,400
      800        Dover Corporation ..............................................................     39,600
      700        Harnischfeger Industries Inc. ..................................................     31,063
      800        Illinois Tool Works Inc. .......................................................     65,300
      900        Ingersoll-Rand Company .........................................................     41,062
      500        Parker-Hannifin Corporation ....................................................     21,563
      800        Timken Company. ................................................................     41,200
    1,000        TRINOVA Corporation ............................................................     38,500
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     492,625
                                                                                                   ---------
                 MEDIA - 0.1%
    1,300        Comcast Corporation, Class A ...................................................     23,888
                                                                                                   ---------

                 MEDICAL PRODUCTS AND SUPPLIES - 2.0%
    3,800        Abbott Laboratories ............................................................    206,625
      200        Allergan, Inc. .................................................................      7,075
      200        Bard (C.R.) Inc. ...............................................................      5,650
    1,600        Baxter International Inc. ......................................................     73,800
      800        Becton, Dickinson & Company.....................................................     39,400
      300        Biomet, Inc. ...................................................................      4,650
      500        Boston Scientific Corporation + ................................................     34,125
      400        Guidant Corporation.............................................................     22,300

</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)                               
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)

                                                                                                    VALUE
    SHARES                                                                                         (NOTE 1)
===============================================================================================================
COMMON STOCKS - (CONTINUED)
                 MEDICAL PRODUCTS AND SUPPLIES - (CONTINUED)
<S>              <C>                                                                              <C>
    6,000        Johnson & Johnson .............................................................. $  345,750
      500        United States Surgical Corporation .............................................     20,062
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     759,437
                                                                                                   ---------
                 MEDICAL SERVICES - 0.9%
    4,000        Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corporation ............................................    158,000
      500        Cognizant Corporation...........................................................     16,063
      250        Covance, Inc.+..................................................................      4,719
      700        HEALTHSOUTH Corporation+........................................................     30,538
    1,100        Humana Inc.+ ...................................................................     20,900
      125        Quest Diagnostics Inc.+ ........................................................      1,969
    1,600        Tenet Healthcare Corporation+ ..................................................     43,200
    1,200        United Healthcare Corporation ..................................................     58,500
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     333,889
                                                                                                   ---------
                 METALS AND MINING - 0.6%
    1,600        Alcan Aluminum Ltd. ............................................................     56,400
      900        Aluminum Company of America ....................................................     62,100
      800        Cyprus Amax Minerals Company. ..................................................     17,900
      800        Inco Ltd. ......................................................................     27,100
      500        Phelps Dodge Corporation .......................................................     34,937
      500        Reynolds Metals Company ........................................................     30,187
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     228,624
                                                                                                   ---------
                 OFFICE EQUIPMENT - 0.6%
      900        Moore Corporation Ltd...........................................................     18,675
    1,100        Pitney Bowes Inc. ..............................................................     63,387
    2,100        Xerox Corporation ..............................................................    123,112
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     205,174
                                                                                                   ---------
                 OIL - DOMESTIC - 2.5%
      700        Amerada Hess Corporation........................................................     41,300
    2,800        Amoco Corporation ..............................................................    243,600
      500        Ashland Oil, Inc. ..............................................................     21,563
    1,100        Atlantic Richfield Company......................................................    145,475
      700        Kerr-McGee Corporation .........................................................     48,125
      200        Louisana Land & Exploration Company ............................................     11,250
    3,200        Occidental Petroleum Corporation ...............................................     81,600
    2,000        Oryx Energy Company+ ...........................................................     48,500
      700        Pennzoil Company. ..............................................................     43,662
    2,100        Phillips Petroleum Company......................................................     92,663
    2,000        Unocal Corporation .............................................................     84,250
    2,800        USX-Marathon Group (New)........................................................     74,550
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     936,538
                                                                                                   ---------
                 OIL - INTERNATIONAL - 5.6%
    3,900        Chevron Corporation ............................................................    258,862
    7,400        Exxon Corporation ..............................................................    766,825
    2,300        Mobil Corporation. .............................................................    301,875
    3,200        Royal Dutch Petroleum Company, ADR..............................................    555,200
    1,700        Texaco Inc. ....................................................................    179,988
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                   2,062,750
                                                                                                   ---------

</TABLE>


                       See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)                            
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)

                                                                                                 VALUE
   SHARES                                                                                       (NOTE 1)
==============================================================================================================
COMMON STOCKS - (CONTINUED)
               OIL SERVICES - 0.9%
<S>            <C>                                                                              <C>
  1,200        Baker Hughes Inc. .............................................................. $ 46,800
  1,200        Dresser Industries, Inc. .......................................................   40,650
    900        Halliburton Company ............................................................   65,137
    500        Rowan Companies Inc.+ ..........................................................   12,625
  1,400        Schlumberger Ltd. ..............................................................  155,575
    300        Western Atlas, Inc. + ..........................................................   20,363
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                 341,150
                                                                                                 -------
               PAPER AND FOREST PRODUCTS - 1.4%
    300        Boise Cascade Corporation ......................................................   10,350
    700        Champion International Corporation. ............................................   29,312
    700        Georgia-Pacific Corporation ....................................................   51,537
  1,900        International Paper Company.....................................................   77,663
  1,500        James River Corporation.........................................................   48,187
  1,500        Kimberly-Clark Corporation .....................................................  146,250
    300        Mead Corporation ...............................................................   16,875
    300        Temple-Inland Inc. .............................................................   16,575
    500        Union Camp Corporation .........................................................   23,688
    800        Westvaco Corporation ...........................................................   23,400
  1,200        Weyerhaeuser Company............................................................   54,600
    500        Willamette Industries Inc. .....................................................   31,437
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                 529,874
                                                                                                 -------
               PHOTO AND OPTICAL - 0.5%
  2,100        Eastman Kodak Company ..........................................................  182,175
                                                                                                 -------

               PRINTING AND PUBLISHING - 0.8%
    800        American Greetings Corporation, Class A ........................................   22,650
    300        Deluxe Corporation .............................................................    9,225
    300        Donnelley (R.R.) & Sons Company.................................................    9,375
    900        Dow Jones & Company Inc. .......................................................   35,663
  1,100        Dun & Bradstreet Corporation ...................................................   26,400
    700        Gannet Inc. ....................................................................   53,637
    300        Harcourt General Inc. ..........................................................   13,575
    500        Knight- Ridder Inc. ............................................................   19,187
    500        McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. ....................................................   24,875
    700        New York Times Company, Class A ................................................   26,863
    700        Times Mirror Company, Class A...................................................   33,075
    600        Tribune Company. ...............................................................   22,950
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                 297,475
                                                                                                 -------
               PROFESSIONAL SERVICES - 0.0%#
    200        Interpublic Group Companies Inc. ...............................................    9,875
    200        Service Corporation International ..............................................    5,800
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                  15,675
                                                                                                 -------
               RECREATION - 1.3%
  1,400        Brunswick Corporation ..........................................................   35,175
  3,700        Disney (Walt) Company ..........................................................  271,025
    800        Fleetwood Enterprises Inc. .....................................................   21,400
    300        Harrah's Entertainment Inc.+ ...................................................    5,850
    500        Hasbro Inc. ....................................................................   19,750
    500        King World Productions Inc. + ..................................................   19,562
  1,600        Mattel, Inc. ...................................................................   45,000
  1,900        Viacom Inc., Class B+ ..........................................................   65,075
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                 482,837
                                                                                                 -------
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)

                                                                                                     VALUE
      SHARES                                                                                        (NOTE 1)
====================================================================================================================
COMMON STOCKS - (CONTINUED)
                 RESTAURANTS AND LODGING - 1.0%
<S>              <C>                                                                              <C>
    1,700        Darden Restaurants Inc. .......................................................  $   12,325
      700        HFS Inc. +.....................................................................      49,000
    2,200        Hilton Hotels Corporation .....................................................      62,700
      800        ITT Corporation+ ..............................................................      45,700
      800        Marriot International Inc. ....................................................      42,500
    2,800        McDonald's Corporation.........................................................     127,400
      800        Wendy's International Inc. ....................................................      17,600
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     357,225
                                                                                                   ---------
                 RETAIL - DISCOUNT - 1.1%
    1,700        Kmart Stores Corporation........................................................     18,913
      900        Rite Aid Corporation. ..........................................................     36,000
      700        TJX Companies Inc. .............................................................    27,825
    1,900        Toys R Us Inc. + ...............................................................     47,500
    9,700        Wal-Mart Stores Inc. ...........................................................    230,375
    2,300        Woolworth Corporation+ .........................................................     46,863
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     407,476
                                                                                                   ---------
                 RETAIL - GENERAL - 1.3%
    2,000        Dayton Hudson Corporation .......................................................    75,250
      900        Dillard Department Stores Inc., Class A .........................................    26,887
    1,700        Federated Department Stores Inc. + ..............................................    55,887
    1,900        May Department Stores Company ...................................................    84,550
      200        Mercantile Stores Inc. ..........................................................     9,800
    1,600        Penny (J.C.) Company Inc. .......................................................    75,800
    1,900        Price/Costco Inc. + .............................................................    50,588
    2,300        Sears, Roebuck & Company ........................................................   110,400
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     489,162
                                                                                                   ---------
                 RETAIL - SPECIALTY - 0.7%
      200        Circuit City Stores Inc. ........................................................     7,025
    1,100        CVS Corporation..................................................................    47,575
    2,100        Gap Inc. ........................................................................    60,375
    1,600        Limited Inc. ....................................................................    27,400
      900        Lowe's Companies Inc. ...........................................................    29,813
      500        Nordstrom, Inc. .................................................................    18,562
      500        Tandy Corporation................................................................    22,625
      700        Walgreen Company ................................................................    28,788
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     242,163
                                                                                                   ---------
                 SAVINGS AND LOANS - 0.3%
      900        Ahmanson (H.F.) & Company........................................................    33,750
      500        Golden West Financial Corporation ...............................................    33,563
    1,100        Great Western Financial Corporation .............................................    34,788
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                     102,101
                                                                                                   ---------
                 SEMICONDUCTORS - 2.7%
    1,700        Advanced Micro Devices Inc. .....................................................    59,500
    4,900        Intel Corporation ...............................................................   795,025
    1,600        Micron Technology, Inc. .........................................................    55,600
    1,300        Texas Instruments Inc. ..........................................................   101,887
                                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                                   1,012,012
                                                                                                   ---------
                 SHIPBUILDING - 0.0%#
      100        Newport News Shipbuilding Inc. ..................................................     1,600
                                                                                                   ---------


</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)  
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                               JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)

                                                                                                  VALUE
    SHARES                                                                                       (NOTE 1)
===========================================================================================================
COMMON STOCKS - (CONTINUED)
               STEEL - 0.2%
<S>            <C>                                                                              <C>
    800        Allegheny Teledyne Inc. ........................................................ $ 19,000
    700        Nucor Corporation ..............................................................   36,400
    500        USX-U.S. Steel Group ...........................................................   15,812
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                  71,212
                                                                                                 -------
               TELECOMMUNICATIONS - 0.9%
  3,100        Lucent Technologies ............................................................  168,175
  1,700        Northern Telecommunications, Ltd. ..............................................   25,163
  1,300        Tellabs, Inc. + ................................................................   53,544
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                 346,882
                                                                                                 -------
               TOBACCO - 1.8%
  1,200        American Brands Inc. ...........................................................   61,200
  4,700        Philip Morris Companies Inc. ...................................................  558,712
  1,300        UST Inc. .......................................................................   39,975
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                 659,887
                                                                                                 -------
               TRANSPORTATION - AIRLINES - 0.3%
    700        AMR Corporation+ ...............................................................   56,350
    500        Delta Air Lines, Inc. ..........................................................   39,500
    500        Southwest Airlines Company .....................................................   11,000
  1,100        USAir Group Inc.+ ..............................................................   22,962
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                 129,812
                                                                                                 -------
               TRANSPORTATION - RAILROADS - 1.0%
  1,100        Burlington Northern Santa Fe Inc. ..............................................   96,250
    700        Conrail Inc. ...................................................................   75,075
  1,400        CSX Corporation ................................................................   67,900
    800        Norfolk Southern Corporation ...................................................   70,900
  1,200        Union Pacific Corporation ......................................................   72,000
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                 382,125
                                                                                                 -------
               TRUCKING AND SHIPPING - 0.2%
  1,100        Federal Express Corporation + ..................................................   56,375
  1,000        Ryder Systems Inc. .............................................................   28,500
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                  84,875
                                                                                                 -------
               UTILITIES - NATURAL GAS - 0.7%
    500        Columbia Gas Systems Inc. ......................................................   32,563
    600        Consolidated Natural Gas Company ...............................................   33,375
    300        NICOR Inc. .....................................................................   10,837
  1,900        NorAm Energy Corporation........................................................   29,687
    900        Pacific Enterprises ............................................................   27,112
    500        Peoples Energy Corporation .....................................................   16,625
    500        Sonat, Inc. ....................................................................   26,625
  1,800        Williams Companies Inc. ........................................................   72,225
                                                                                                 -------
                                                                                                 249,049
                                                                                                 -------
               UTILITIES - TELEPHONE - 6.1%
  1,200        ALLTEL Corporation .............................................................   38,550
  3,300        Ameritech Corporation ..........................................................  197,175
  9,200        AT&T Corporation ...............................................................  362,250
  2,600        Bell Atlantic Corporation ......................................................  174,850
  6,000        BellSouth Corporation. .........................................................  266,250
  5,900        GTE Corporation ................................................................  277,300
  5,400        MCI Communications Corporation .................................................  189,675
  2,600        NYNEX Corporation ..............................................................  131,625
  2,700        Pacific Telesis Group ..........................................................  105,975

</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)                                    
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)

                                                                                                     VALUE
    SHARES                                                                                          (NOTE 1)
============================================================================================================================
COMMON STOCKS - (CONTINUED)
                 UTILITIES - TELEPHONE - (CONTINUED)
<S>              <C>                                                                <C>           <C>
    3,700        SBC Communications Inc. .......................................                  $   203,037
    3,600        Sprint Corporation ............................................                      146,700
    2,800        U.S. West Inc. ................................................                       92,050
    2,700        WorldCom Inc. +................................................                       67,837
                                                                                                  -----------
                                                                                                    2,253,274
                                                                                                  -----------
                 OTHER - 0.2%
    1,200        Rockwell International Corporation ............................                       78,900
                                                                                                  -----------

TOTAL COMMON STOC                                                                                  33,138,236
                                                                                                  ===========


    PRINCIPAL
      AMOUNT
- -------------------
                U.S. TREASURY BILLS - 0.4%
 $100,000       5.020%** 02/20/1997 ++..........................................                       98,717
   50,000       4.790%** 03/13/1997 ++..........................................                       49,401
                                                                                                  -----------
                TOTAL U.S. TREASURY BILLS (COST $148,118).......................                      148,118
                                                                                                  ===========

                TOTAL SECURITIES (COST $28,416,928).............................                   33,286,354
                                                                                                  ===========

REPURCHASE AGREEMENT - 9.7%
   (Cost $3,625,000)
3,625,000      Agreement with Smith Barney, 5.550% dated 12/31/97, to
                be repurchased at $3,626,677 on 02/03/97, collateralized by:
                by: $3,697,503 U.S. Government Agency Securities, 5.125%
                8.625% due 09/18/97 - 07/15/43..................................                   3,625,000
                                                                                                 ===========

TOTAL INVESTMENTS (COST $32,041,928*)...........................................   99.3%          36,911,354
OTHER ASSETS AND LIABILITIES (NET)..............................................    0.7              242,995
                                                                                 ------          -----------
NET ASSETS......................................................................  100.0%         $37,154,349
                                                                                 ======          ===========
</TABLE>

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

*    Aggregate cost for Federal tax purposes.
**   Rate represents annualized yield at date of purchase.
+    Non - income producing security.
++   Security segregated as collateral for Futures Contracts.
#    Amount represents less than 0.01%.

ABBREVIATION:
ADR     American Depositary Receipt.



                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>


NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)


    NUMBER OF                                                                                  NET UNREALIZED
    CONTRACTS                                                                                    APPRECIATION
===============================================================================================================
FUTURES CONTRACTS - LONG POSITION
<S>      <C>                                                                                       <C>
   5      S&P 500 Index Futures, March 1997.....................................                      $57,350
                                                                                                   ==========

</TABLE>












                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>


NATIONS FUNDS
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 JANUARY 31, 1997 (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                                                   <C>       <C>
ASSETS:
     Investments, at value (Cost $32,041,928)(Note 1)
          See accompanying schedule:
          Securities .................................................          $33,286,354
          Repurchase agreement .......................................            3,625,000
            Total investments ........................................           36,911,354
     Cash ............................................................              125,266
     Receivable from investment advisor (Note 2) .....................               53,492
     Dividends receivable ............................................               40,603
     Receivable for Fund shares sold .................................               12,100
     Unamortized organization costs (Note 6) .........................                3,929
     Interest receivable .............................................                1,677
     Prepaid expenses ................................................               31,982
            Total Assets .............................................           37,180,403

LIABILITIES:
     Custodian fees payable (Note 2) ................................. $ 7,375
     Administration fee payable (Note 2) .............................   2,848
     Transfer agent fees payble (Note 2) .............................   1,527
     Variation margin (Note 1) .......................................   1,125
     Accrued Trustees' fees and expenses (Note 2) ....................     594
     Shareholder servicing and distribution fees payable (Note 3).....     343
     Accrued expenses and other payables .............................  12,242
                                                                       -------
            Total Liabilities ........................................               26,054
                                                                                 ----------
NET ASSETS ...........................................................          $37,154,349
                                                                                 ==========

NET ASSETS consist of:
     Undistributed net investment income .............................          $    38,688
     Accumulated net realized gain on investment sold and future 
       contracts .....................................................              371,764
     Unrealized appreciation of investments and futures contracts ....            4,926,776
     Paid-in capital .................................................           31,817,121
                                                                                 ----------
            Total Net Assets .........................................          $37,154,349
                                                                                 ==========

NET ASSETS:
Primary A Shares .....................................................          $35,260,801
                                                                                 ==========
Investor A Shares ....................................................          $ 1,839,637
                                                                                 ==========
Investor C Shares ....................................................          $    53,451
                                                                                 ==========

SHARES OUTSTANDING
Primary A Shares .....................................................            2,862,350
                                                                                 ==========
Investor A Shares ....................................................              149,357
                                                                                 ==========
Investor C Shares ....................................................                4,340
                                                                                 ==========

PRIMARY A SHARES:
Net asset value, offering and redemption price per share .............               $12.32
                                                                                 ==========
INVESTOR A SHARES:
Net asset value, offering and redemption price per share  ............               $12.32
                                                                                 ==========
INVESTOR C SHAERS:
Net asset value and offering price per share*  .......................               $12.32
                                                                                 ==========

</TABLE>

- --------------
*Redemption price per share is equal to Net Asset Value less any applicable
contingent deferred sales charge.



                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
FOR THE PERIOD ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997* (UNAUDITED)

<TABLE>

<S>                                                                     <C>     <C>
INVESTMENT INCOME:
     Dividends (net of foreign withholding taxes of $1,891)...........          $     256,108
     Interest ........................................................                 50,849
                                                                                 ------------
       Total Investment Income .......................................                306,957

EXPENSES:
     Investment advisory fee (Note 2) ................................ $ 64,712
     Registration and filing fees ....................................   57,043
     Custodian fees (Note 2) .........................................   16,499
     Legal and audit fees ............................................   13,223
     Administration fee (Note 2) .....................................   12,942
     Transfer agent fees (Note 2) ....................................    2,943
     Trustees' fees and expenses (Note 2) ............................      776
     Amortization of organization costs (Note 6) .....................      281
     Other ...........................................................    2,317
                                                                        -------
       Subtotal ......................................................  170,736
     Shareholder servicing and distribution fees (Note 3):
       Investor A Shares .............................................      883
       Investor C Shares .............................................       15
     Fees waived and expenses reimbursed by investment adviser
      (Note 2) .......................................................  (160,154)
                                                                        --------
       Total Expenses ................................................                 65,480
                                                                                 ------------
NET INVESTMENT INCOME ................................................                241,477
                                                                                 ------------
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN ON INVESTMENTS
  (Notes 1 and 4):
     Net realized gain on:
       Securities transactions .......................................                263,009
       Futures contracts .............................................                108,755
                                                                                 ------------
     Net realized gain on investments during the period ..............                371,764
                                                                                 ------------
     Net change in unrealized appreciation of:
       Securities ....................................................              4,869,426
       Futures contracts .............................................                 57,350
                                                                                 ------------
     Net unrealized appreciation of investments during the period ....              4,926,776
                                                                                 ------------
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments ......................              5,298,540
                                                                                 ------------
NET INCREASE IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM
  OPERATIONS .........................................................          $   5,540,017

</TABLE>

- -------------
* Nations Managed Index Fund commenced operations on July 31, 1996.


                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>

NATIONS FUND
NATIONS MANAGED INDEX FUND
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     Period
                                                                                      Ended
                                                                                January 31, 1997*
                                                                                   (unaudited)
                                                                                -----------------
<S>                                                                             <C>
Net investment income ................................................          $      241,477
Net realized gain on investments and futures contracts
     during the period ...............................................                 371,764
Net unrealized appreciation on investments and futures contracts
     during the period ...............................................               4,926,776
                                                                                --------------
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations .................               5,540,017
Distributions to shareholders from net investment income:
     Primary A .......................................................                (197,889)
     Investor A ......................................................                  (4,888)
     Investor C ......................................................                     (12)
Net increase in net assets from:
     Primary A share transactions (Note 5) ...........................              30,075,697
     Investor A share transactions (Note 5) ..........................               1,689,332
     Investor C share transactions (Note 5) ..........................                  52,082
                                                                                --------------
Net increase in net assets ...........................................              37,154,339
NET ASSETS:
Beginning of period ..................................................                      10
                                                                                --------------
End of period (including undistributed net investment
     income of $38,688) ..............................................          $   37,154,349
                                                                                ==============

</TABLE>



- -----------
* Nations Managed Index Fund commenced operations on July 31, 1996.



                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>

Nations Managed Index Fund
Financial Highlights
For a Primary A share outstanding throughout the period.



                                                              Period
                                                               Ended
                                                          January 31, 1997*
                                                            (unaudited)
                                                           --------------

Net Asset Value, beginning of period............................$10.00
                                                                                
Income from investment operations:
Net investment income.......................................      0.10
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments.............      2.31
                                                                                
Total from investment operations............................      2.41
Distributions from net investment income....................     (0.09)
                                                                                
Net Asset Value, end of period..............................    $12.32
                                                                                
Total return +..............................................     24.15%
                                                                                

Ratios to average net assets/supplemental data:
Net assets, end of period (in 000's).........................  $35,261
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets............     0.50%**
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets.........     1.87%**
Portfolio turnover rate......................................        7%
Average commission rate (per share of security)..............  $0.0253
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets
   without waivers and expense reimbursements ...............     1.32%**
Net investment income per share without
   waivers and  expense reimbursements.......................    $0.06


 * The Nations Managed Index Fund's Primary A shares commenced operations on
   July 31, 1996
** Annualized.
+  Total return represents aggregate total return for the period indicated and
   does not reflect any applicable sales charges.


                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>


Nations Managed Index Fund
Financial Highlights
For a Investor A share outstanding throughout the period.


 
                                                               Period
                                                                Ended
                                                          January 31, 1997*
                                                             (unaudited)
                                                            --------------

Net Asset Value, beginning of period.........................   $10.00
                                                                               
Income from investment operations:
Net investment income........................................     0.09
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments..............     2.31
                                                                               
Total from investment operations.............................     2.40
Distributions to shareholders:
Distributions from net investment income.....................    (0.08)
                                                                               
Net Asset Value, end of period...............................   $12.32
                                                                               
Total return +...............................................    24.10%


Ratios to average net assets/supplemental data:
Net assets, end of period (in 000's).........................   $1,840
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets............     0.75%**
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets.........     1.62%**
Portfolio turnover rate......................................        7%
Average commission rate (per share of security)..............  $0.0253
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets
   without waivers and expense reimbursements ...............     1.57%**
Net investment income per share without
   waivers and  expense reimbursements.......................    $0.05


- ---------------------------------
 * The Nations Managed Index Fund's Investor A shares commenced operations
   on July 31, 1996.
** Annualized.
+  Total return represents aggregate total return for the period indicated and
   does not reflect any applicable sales charges.

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>


Nations Managed Index Fund
Financial Highlights
For a Investor C share outstanding throughout the period.


                                                             Period
                                                              Ended
                                                        January 31, 1997*
                                                           (unaudited)
                                                          --------------

Net Asset Value, beginning of period.......................    $10.00
                                                                               
Income from investment operations:
Net investment income.......................................     0.05
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments.............     2.31
                                                                               
Total from investment operations............................     2.36
Distributions to shareholders:
Distributions from net investment income....................    (0.04)
                                                                               
Net Asset Value, end of period..............................   $12.32
                                                                               
Total return +..............................................    23.63%
                                                                               

Ratios to average net assets/supplemental data:
Net assets, end of period (in 000's).........................      $53
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets............     1.00%**
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets.........     1.37%**
Portfolio turnover rate......................................        7%
Average commission rate (per share of security)..............  $0.0253
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets
   without waivers and expense reimbursements ...............     1.82%**
Net investment income per share without
   waivers and  expense reimbursements.......................    $0.01


- ---------------------------------
 * The Nations Managed Index Fund's Investor C shares commenced operations on 
   July 31, 1996.
** Annualized.
+  Total return represents aggregate total return for the period indicated and
   does not reflect any applicable sales charges.


                       See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

                                  NATIONS FUND

              NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED) (UNAUDITED)


1.   SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES.

Nations Fund Trust (the "Trust") is registered under the Investment Company Act
of 1940, as amended, (the "1940 Act"), as an open-end investment company. As of
the date of this report, the Trust offers thirty-three separate portfolios. The
information presented in these financial statements pertains only to the
following fund: Nations Managed Index Fund (the "Fund"). The Fund currently
offers Primary A shares, Investor A Shares and Investor C Shares. The Board of
Trustees has authorized the issuance of Primary B Shares of the Fund. As of
January 31, 1997, no Primary B Shares have been issued. Shareholders of the Fund
have equal voting rights on matters affecting all shareholders of the Fund
equally. In addition, each class of shares of the Fund has exclusive voting
rights on matters that relate solely to its class, and separate voting rights on
matters in which the interests of one class of shares differ from the interests
of any other class. The preparation of financial statements in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates
and assumptions that affect the reported amounts and disclosures in the
financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The
following is a summary of significant accounting policies followed by the Fund
in the preparation of its financial statements.

SECURITIES VALUATION: The Fund's portfolio securities which are traded on a
recognized stock exchange are valued at the last sale price on the securities
exchange on which such securities are primarily traded or at the last sale price
on the national securities market. Securities traded only on over-the-counter
markets are valued on the basis of the closing over-the-counter bid prices or,
if no sale occurred on such day, at the mean of the current bid and asked
prices. Certain securities may be valued by one or more principal market makers.
Restricted securities, securities for which market quotations are not readily
available and other assets are valued at fair value under the supervision of the
Board of Trustees. Short-term investments that mature in 60 days or less are
valued at amortized cost.

REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS: The Fund may engage in repurchase agreement transactions.
Under the terms of a typical repurchase agreement, the Fund takes possession of
an underlying debt obligation subject to an obligation of the seller to
repurchase, and the Fund to resell, the obligation at an agreed-upon price and
time, thereby determining the yield during the Fund's holding period. This
arrangement results in a fixed rate of return that is not subject to market
fluctuations during the Fund's holding period. The value of the collateral is at
least equal at all times to the total amount of the repurchase obligations,
including interest. Generally, in the event of counterparty default, the Fund
has the right to use the collateral to offset losses incurred. There would be
potential loss to the Fund in the event the Fund is delayed or prevented from
exercising its right to dispose of the collateral securities, including the risk
of a possible decline in the value of the underlying securities during the
period while the Fund seeks to assert its right. Unless permitted by the
Securities and Exchange Commission, the Fund will not enter into repurchase
agreements with the investment adviser, the distributor or any of their
affiliates. The Fund's investment adviser, acting under the supervision of the
Board of Trustees, monitors the value of the collateral received as well as the
creditworthiness of those banks and dealers with which the Fund enter into
repurchase agreements to evaluate potential risks.

FUTURES CONTRACTS: The Fund may invest in futures contracts for the purpose of
hedging against changes in values of the Fund's securities or changes in the
prevailing levels of interest rates or currency exchange rates or for gaining
exposure to the equity market. Upon entering into a futures contract, the Fund
is required to deposit with the broker an amount of cash or cash equivalents
equal to a certain percentage of the contract

<PAGE>

                                  NATIONS FUND

              NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED) (UNAUDITED)


amount. This is known as the "initial margin."  Subsequent payments  ("variation
margin")  are made or  received  by the Fund  each day,  depending  on the daily
fluctuation of the value of the contract.

During the period the futures contract is open, changes in the value of the
contract are recognized as unrealized gains or losses by "marking-to-market" on
a daily basis to reflect the market value of the contract at the end of each
day. The Fund recognizes a realized gain or loss when the contract is closed
equal to the difference between the proceeds from (or cost of) the closing
transaction and the Fund's basis in the contract.

Risks arise in the possible movement of the securities or indices underlying
those investments. Risks also include the possibility that there may not be a
liquid secondary market for these contracts, that a change in the value of the
contract may not correlate with changes in the value of the underlying
securities or that the counterparty to a contract may default on its obligation
to perform.

SECURITIES TRANSACTIONS AND INVESTMENT INCOME: Securities transactions are
accounted for on a trade date basis. Realized gains and losses are computed on
the specific identification of the securities sold. Interest income, adjusted
for amortization of market discounts and premiums on investments and
amortization of original issue discounts on the effective yield method, is
earned from the settlement date and is recorded on an accrual basis. Dividend
income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. The Fund's investment income and
realized and unrealized gains and losses are allocated among its classes based
upon the relative net asset value of each class of shares.

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS: It is the policy of the Fund to
declare and pay dividends from net investment income each calendar quarter. The
Fund will distribute net realized capital gains (including net short-term
capital gains), unless offset by any available capital loss carryforward,
annually after the fiscal year in which the income is earned. Additional
distributions of net investment income and capital gains may be made at the
discretion of the Board of Trustees in order to avoid application of the 4%
non-deductible Federal excise tax. Income distributions and capital gain
distributions on a Fund level are determined in accordance with income tax
regulations which may differ from generally accepted accounting principles.
These differences are primarily due to differing treatments of income and gains
on various investment securities held by the Fund, timing differences and
differing characterization of distributions made by the Fund as a whole.

FEDERAL INCOME TAX: The Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment
company by complying with the requirements of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended, applicable to regulated investment companies and by distributing
substantially all of its earnings to its shareholders. Therefore, no Federal
income or excise tax provision is applicable.

EXPENSES: General expenses of the Trust are allocated to the relevant Fund based
upon relative net assets. Operating expenses directly attributable to a Fund or
class of shares are charged to the respective Fund's or class's operations.
Expenses of each Fund not directly attributable to the operations of any class
of shares are prorated among the classes based on the relative average net
assets of each class of shares.


<PAGE>
                                  NATIONS FUND
             NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued) (Unaudited)

2.   INVESTMENT ADVISORY FEE, SUB-ADVISORY FEE, ADMINISTRATION FEE AND
     RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS.

The Trust, on behalf of the Fund, entered into an investment advisory agreement
("Investment Advisory Agreement") with NationsBanc Advisors, Inc. ("NBAI"), a
wholly-owned subsidiary of NationsBank, N.A.("NationsBank"), pursuant to which
NBAI provides investment advisory services to the Fund. Under the terms of the
Investment Advisory Agreement, NBAI is entitled to receive an advisory fee at
the annual rate of 0.50% of the Fund's average daily net assets.

The Trust has entered into sub-advisory agreement ("Sub-Advisory Agreement")
with NBAI and TradeStreet Investment Associates, Inc. ("TradeStreet"), a
wholly-owned subsidiary of NationsBank. Under the terms of the Sub-Advisory
Agreement, TradeStreet is entitled to receive from NBAI a sub-advisory fee at
the annual rate of 0.10% of the Fund's average daily net assets.

Stephens Inc. ("Stephens") serves as the administrator of the Trust pursuant to
administration agreements ("Administration Agreements"). First Data Investor
Services Group, Inc.("First Data"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of First Data
Corporation, serves as the co-administrator of the Trust pursuant to
co-administration agreements ("Co-Administration Agreements"). Pursuant to the
Administration and Co-Administration Agreements, the administrator and the
co-administrator are entitled to receive a combined fee, computed daily and paid
monthly, at the annual rate of 0.10% of the average daily net assets of the
Trust and the investment portfolios of Nations Fund, Inc and Nations Fund
Portfolios, Inc. (other registered open-end investment companies which are part
of the Nations Fund family) on a combined basis. NationsBank, serves as the
sub-administrator of the Trust pursuant to sub-administration agreements with
Stephens. For the period ended January 31, 1997, Stephens earned $8,222 from the
Fund for its administration services, of which $1,294 was paid to NationsBank
for its administration services.

The investment adviser, sub-adviser, administrator and co-administrator may,
from time to time, reduce their fees payable by the Fund (either voluntarily or
pursuant to applicable state limitations). For the period ended January 31,
1997, the investment adviser voluntarily waived fees and reimbursed expenses of
$52,662 and $53,492, respectively.

NationsBank of Texas, N.A.("NationsBank of Texas") acts as the custodian for the
Fund and, for the period ended January 31, 1997, earned $3,601 for providing
custodial services. On October 18, 1996, The Bank of New York became
sub-custodian for the Fund. First Data serves as the transfer agent for the
Fund's shares. NationsBank of Texas acts as the sub-transfer agent for the
Primary Shares of the Fund and, for the period ended January 31, 1997
approximately $2,919 for providing transfer agent services.

Stephens serves as distributor of the Fund's shares.

No officer, director or employee of NBAI, TradeStreet, Stephens, First Data or
any affiliate thereof, receives any compensation from the Trust for serving as a
trustee or officer of the Trust. The Trust pays each Trustee an annual fee of
$1,000 ($3,000 for the Chairman of the Board), plus $500 and an additional
$1,000 for each in-person board meeting, and $500 for each telephonic board
meeting attended. The Trust also reimburses expenses incurred by each Trustee in
attending such meetings.

<PAGE>

                                  NATIONS FUND
             NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (Continued) (Unaudited)


The Trust's eligible Trustees may participate in a nonqualified deferred
compensation plan and retirement plan which may be terminated at any time. All
benefits provided under these plans are unfunded and any payments to plan
participants are paid solely out of the Fund's assets. Income earned on each
plan participant's deferral account is tied to the rate of return of the
eligible mutual funds selected by the participants or, if no funds are selected,
to the rate of return of Nations Treasury Fund, a Fund of the Nations Fund,
Inc.. The expense for the deferred compensation plan is included in the
"Trustees' fees and expenses" line of the Statements of Operations.

3.   SHAREHOLDER SERVICING AND DISTRIBUTION PLANS.

The Trust has adopted shareholder servicing and distribution plans pursuant to
Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act for Investor A Shares of the Fund ("Investor A
Plan"); a shareholder servicing plan ("Servicing Plan") for Investor C Shares of
the Fund and a distribution plan ("Distribution Plan") pursuant to Rule 12b-1
under the 1940 Act for Investor C Shares of the Fund. The Investor A Plan
permits the Fund to compensate (i) servicing agents and selling agents that have
entered into a servicing agreement with the Fund for services provided to their
customers that own Investor A Shares and (ii) Stephens for distribution-related
expenses incurred in connection with Investor A Shares. The Servicing Plan
permits the Fund to compensate servicing agents for services provided to their
customers that own Investor C Shares. The Distribution Plan permits the Fund to
compensate or reimburse Stephens for any activities or expenses primarily
intended to result in the sale of the Fund's Investor C Shares. Payments under
the plans are accrued daily and paid monthly at a rate set from time to time by
the Fund. Fees paid pursuant to the plans are charged as expenses of Investor A
Shares and Investor C Shares, respectively, of the Fund as accrued.

For the period ended January 31, 1997, the effective rates paid by the Fund, as
a percentage of average daily net assets, pursuant to the plans are as follows:

                                                     INVESTOR C     INVESTOR C
                                       INVESTOR     DISTRIBUTION    SERVICING
                FUND                    A PLAN          PLAN           PLAN

Nations Managed Index Fund..........      0.25%          0.25%           0.25%

A substantial portion of the fees paid pursuant to the plans described above are
paid to affiliates of NationsBank and NBAI.

4.   PURCHASES AND SALES OF SECURITIES.

The aggregate cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of securities, excluding
U.S. government securities and short-term investments, for the period ended
January 31, 1997 were $29,567,483 and $1,561,398, respectively.

At January 31, 1997, aggregate gross unrealized appreciation and unrealized
depreciation for tax purposes was $5,009,467 and $140,041, respectively.


<PAGE>

                                  NATIONS FUND

              NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED) (UNAUDITED)


5.   SHARES OF BENEFICIAL INTEREST.

As of January 31, 1997, an unlimited number of shares without par value were
authorized for the Trust. The Trust's Declaration of Trust authorizes the Board
of Trustees to classify or reclassify any authorized, but unissued shares into
one or more additional classes or series of shares. Transactions in shares of
beneficial interest for the period ended January 31, 1997 were as follows:

                                                           PERIOD ENDED
                                                         JANUARY 31, 1997*
                                                     SHARES              AMOUNT
      Primary A shares:
      Sold...............................        2,853,693          $29,985,314
        Issued as reinvestment
          of dividends...................           16,819              190,679
           
      Redeemed...........................           (8,163)            (100,296)
                                                   -------          -----------
      Net increase.......................        2,862,349          $30,075,697
                                                ==========          ===========

                                                  SHARES              AMOUNT
      Investor A shares:
      Sold...............................          150,763           $1,705,618
        Issued as reinvestment
           of dividends....................            395                4,619

      Redeemed...........................           (1,801)             (20,905)
                                                   -------           ----------
      Net increase.......................          149,357           $1,689,332
                                                  ========           ==========

                                                  SHARES              AMOUNT
      Investor C shares:
      Sold...............................            4,339              $52,071
        Issued as reinvestment
           of dividends..................                1                   11
                                                        --                -----

      Net increase.......................            4,340              $52,082
                                                    ======              =======

*  Nations Managed Index Fund's Primary A Shares, Investor A Shares and Investor
   C Shares commenced operations on July 31, 1996.

6.   ORGANIZATION COSTS.

The Fund bears all costs in connection with its organization. All such costs are
being amortized on the straight-line method over a period of five years from
commencement of operations. In the event that any of the shares issued by the
Fund to their sponsor prior to the commencement of the Fund's public offering
("initial shares") are redeemed during such amortization period by any holder
thereof, the Fund will be reimbursed by the holder for any unamortized
organization costs in the same proportion as the number of initial shares
redeemed bears to the number of initial shares outstanding at the time of
redemption.



<PAGE>

<PAGE>


                               NATIONS FUND TRUST
                           FILE NOS. 2-97817; 811-4305



                                     PART C

                                OTHER INFORMATION

PART C.  OTHER INFORMATION

Item 24.      Financial Statements and Exhibits

(a)   Financial Statements:

      Included in Part A:

              Per Share Income and Capital Changes

      Included in Part B:

     Audited Financial Statements for Nations Government Money Market, Nations
     Tax Exempt, Nations Value, Nations Capital Growth, Nations Emerging Growth,
     Nations Disciplined Equity, Nations Equity Index, Nations Balanced Assets,
     Nations Short-Intermediate Government, Nations Short-Term Income, Nations
     Diversified Income, Nations Strategic Fixed Income, Nations Short-Term
     Municipal Income, Nations Municipal Income, Nations Intermediate Municipal
     Bond, Nations Florida Intermediate Municipal Bond, Nations Georgia
     Intermediate Municipal Bond, Nations Maryland Intermediate Municipal Bond,
     Nations North Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond, Nations South Carolina
     Intermediate Municipal Bond, Nations Tennessee Intermediate Municipal Bond,
     Nations Texas Intermediate Municipal Bond, Nations Virginia Intermediate
     Municipal Bond, Nations Florida Municipal Bond, Nations Georgia Municipal
     Bond, Nations Maryland Municipal Bond, Nations North Carolina Municipal
     Bond, Nations South Carolina Municipal Bond, Nations Tennessee Municipal
     Bond, Nations Texas Municipal Bond Fund and Nations Virginia Municipal Bond
     Funds:

               Schedule of Investments for March 31, 1996 Statements of Assets
               and Liabilities for March 31, 1996 Statements of Operations for
               the fiscal period ended March 31, 1996
               Statements of Changes in Net Assets for the fiscal period ended
               March 31, 1996 and the year ended November 30, 1995 Schedule of
               Capital Stock Activity for the fiscal period ended March 31, 1996
               Notes to Financial Statements
               Report of Independent Accountants, dated May 17, 1996


                                       1


<PAGE>


Unaudited financial statements for the period ended January 31, 1997 for Primary
A, Investor A and Investor C Shares.

 Included in Part C:

      Consent of Independent Accountants

(b)   Exhibits

      Exhibit
      Number

      (1)(a)   Declaration of Trust dated May 6, 1985, is incorporated by
               reference to its Registration Statement, filed May 17, 1985.

      (1)(b)   Certificate pertaining to classification of shares dated May 17,
               1985, is incorporated by reference to its Registration Statement,
               filed May 17, 1985.

      (1)(c)   Amendment dated July 27, 1987, to Declaration of Trust is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 4 to
               its Registration Statement filed January 29, 1988.

      (1)(d)   Amendment dated September 13, 1989, to Declaration of Trust is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to
               its Registration Statement filed March 16, 1990.

      (1)(e)   Certificate pertaining to classification of shares dated August
               24, 1990, is incorporated by Post-Effective Amendment No. 11,
               filed September 26, 1990.

      (1)(f)   Amendment dated November 26, 1990 to Declaration of Trust is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 13,
               filed January 18, 1991.

      (1)(g)   Certificate pertaining to classification of shares dated July 18,
               1991 is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
               16, filed July 23, 1991.

      (1)(h)   Amendment dated March 26, 1992, to Declaration of Trust is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 19,
               filed March 30, 1992.

      (1)(i)   Certificate relating to classification of shares is incorporated
               by reference to Amendment No. 19, filed March 30, 1992.

      (1)(j)   Amendment dated September 21, 1992, to Declaration of Trust is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 23, 
               filed December 23, 1992.

      (1)(k)   Amendment dated March 26, 1993, to the Declaration of Trust is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 27,
               filed May 27, 1993.



                                       2

<PAGE>


      (1)(l)   Certificate relating to the establishment of money market funds'
               Investor C shares dated July 8, 1993, is incorporated by
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 29, filed September 30,
               1993.

      (1)(m)   Certificate relating to the establishment of the Equity Index,
               Short-Trm Municipal Income, Florida Municipal Bond, Georgia
               Municipal Bond, North Carolina Municipal Bond, South Carolina
               Municipal Bond, Tennessee Municipal Bond, Texas Municipal Bond
               and Virginia Municipal Bond Funds dated September 22, 1993, is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 29,
               filed September 30, 1993.

      (1)(n)   Certificate relating to the establishment of the Special Equity
               Fund is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No.
               30, filed December 1, 1993.

      (1)(o)   Certificate relating to the redesignation of Investor B Shares
               and Investor C Shares of the non-money market funds to "Investor
               C Shares" and "Investor N Shares," respectively, is incorporated
               by reference by Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29,
               1994.

      (1)(p)   Certificate relating to the Classification of Shares of the Money
               Market Fund and the Tax Exempt Fund creating "Investor D Shares,"
               is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 36,
               filed January 31, 1995.

      (1)(q)   Classification of Shares relating to the renaming of Nations
               Special Equity Fund is incorporated by reference to
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 36, filed January 31, 1995.

      (1)(r)   Certificate relating to the establishment of Nations Tax-Managed
               Equity Fund's Series of Shares is incorporated by reference to
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 40, filed October 20, 1995.

      (2)(a)   Amended and Restated Code of Regulations as approved and adopted
               by Registrant's Board of Trustees is incorporated by reference to
               Pre-Effective Amendment No. 2, filed October 4, 1985.

      (2)(b)   Amendment to the Code of Regulations as approved and adopted by
               Registrant's Board of Trustees on June 24, 1992, is incorporated
               by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 22, filed July 30,
               1992.

      (3)      None.

      (4)(a)   Specimen copies of share certificates, to be filed by amendment.

      (5)(a)   Investment Advisory Agreement between NationsBanc Advisors, Inc.,
               ("NBAI") and the Registrant is incorporated by reference to
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 41, filed January 29, 1996.


                                       3

<PAGE>


      (5)(b)   Sub-Advisory Agreement among NBAI, TradeStreet Investment
               Associates, Inc. ("TradeStreet") and the Registrant is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 41, 
               filed January 29, 1996.

      (6)(a)   Distribution Agreement between Stephens Inc. and Registrant for
               all classes of shares of Nations Fund Trust is incorporated by 
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 37, filed March 31,
               1995.

      (7)      None.

      (8)(a)   Mutual Fund Custody Agreement between Registrant and NationsBank
               of Texas, N.A. ("NationsBank Texas"), dated June 26, 1992,
               relating to the Money Market Fund, Government Fund, Tax Exempt
               Fund, Balanced Assets Fund, Short-Term Income Fund, Diversified
               Income Fund, Capital Growth Fund, Emerging Growth Fund,
               Adjustable Rate Government Fund, Strategic Fixed Income Fund,
               Mortgage-Backed Securities Fund, North Carolina Municipal Bond
               Fund, Florida Municipal Bond Fund and Texas Municipal Bond Fund,
               is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 23,
               filed December 23, 1992.

      (8)(b)   Amendment No. 1 dated February 3, 1993, to the Mutual Fund
               Custody Agreement dated June 26, 1992 between Registrant and
               NationsBank Texas, relating to the addition of the Tennessee
               Municipal Bond Fund and Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund, is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 26,
               filed March 26, 1993.

   (8)(b)(i)   Amendment No. 2 to the Mutual Fund Custody Agreement between
               Registrant and NationsBank Texas relating to the Equity Index
               Fund, Short-Term Municipal Income Fund, Nations Florida
               Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund, Nations Georgia Intermediate
               Municipal Bond Fund, Nations Maryland Intermediate Municipal Bond
               Fund, Nations North Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund,
               Nations South Carolina Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund, Nations
               Tennessee Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund, Nations Texas
               Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund, Nations Virginia Intermediate
               Municipal Bond Fund is incorporated by reference to
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29, 1994.

   (8)(b)(ii)  Form of Amendment No. 3 to the Mutual Fund Custody Agreement
               between Registrant and NationsBank Texas relating to the Special
               Equity Fund is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
               Amendment No. 31, filed January 31, 1994.

   (8)(b)(iii) Form of Amendment No. 4 to the Mutual Fund Custody Agreement 
               between the Registrant and NationsBank Texas relating to Nations
               Tax-Managed Equity Fund is incorporated by reference to
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 40, filed October 20, 1995.

                                       4

<PAGE>

      (8)(c)   Form of Global Sub-Custody Agreement between Registrant, The
               Chase Manhattan Bank and NationsBank Texas is incorporated by
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 31, filed January 31,
               1994.

      (9)(a)   Administration Agreement between Stephens Inc. and Registrant is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 37, 
               filed March 31, 1995.

      (9)(b)   Co-Administration Agreement between The Boston Company Advisors,
               Inc. and Registrant is incorporated by reference to Post-
               Effective Amendment No. 37, filed March 31, 1995.

      (9)(c)   Shareholder Administration Agreement for Trust B Shares (now
               known as Primary B Shares) is incorporated by reference to
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 41, filed January 29, 1996.

      (9)(d)   Transfer Agency and Services Agreement dated June 1, 1995,
               between Registrant and The Shareholder Services Group, Inc., to
               be filed by amendment.

      (9)(e)   Transfer Agency Agreement between Registrant and NationsBank
               Texas, dated April 25, 1992, relating to the Trust Shares (now
               known as Primary Shares) of the Government, Tax Exempt, Money
               Market, Income, Equity, Value, Managed Bond, Municipal Income,
               Georgia Municipal Bond, Maryland Municipal Bond, South Carolina
               Municipal Bond, Virginia Municipal Bond and Short-Intermediate
               Government Funds, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
               Amendment No. 22, filed April 6, 1992.

      (9)(f)   Amendment No. 1 dated September 28, 1992, to the Transfer Agency
               Agreement between Registrant and NationsBank Texas, dated April
               25, 1992, relating to the Trust Shares (now known as Primary
               Shares) of the Capital Growth Fund Emerging Growth Fund, Balanced
               Assets Fund, Short-Term Income Fund, Adjustable Rate Government
               Fund, Diversified Income Fund, Strategic Fixed Income Fund,
               Mortgage-Backed Securities Fund, Florida Municipal Bond Fund,
               North Carolina Municipal Bond Fund and Texas Municipal Bond Fund,
               is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 26,
               filed March 26, 1993.

      (9)(g)   Amendment No. 2 dated February 3, 1993, to the Transfer Agency
               Agreement between Registrant and NationsBank Texas, dated April
               25, 1992, relating to the Tennessee Municipal Bond Fund and
               Municipal Income Fund, is incorporated by reference to
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 26, filed March 26, 1993.

      (9)(h)   Amendment No. 3 to the Transfer Agency Agreement relating to the
               Equity Index Fund, Florida Municipal Bond Fund, Georgia Municipal
               Bond Fund, Maryland Municipal Bond Fund, North Carolina Municipal
               Bond Fund, South Carolina Municipal Bond Fund, Tennessee
               Municipal Bond Fund, Texas Municipal Bond Fund


                                       5

<PAGE>



               and Virginia Municipal Bond Fund, is incorporated by reference to
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 29, filed September 30, 1993.

   (9)(h)(i)   Amendment No. 4 to the Transfer Agency Agreement relating to 
               Nations Tax-Managed Equity Fund is incorporated by reference to 
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 40, filed October 20, 1995.

      (9)(i)   Cross Indemnification Agreement dated June 27, 1995, between the
               Trust, Nations Fund, Inc. and Nations Fund Portfolios, Inc.
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective No. 39, filed 
               September 28, 1995.

      (9)(j)   Form of Shareholder Servicing Agreement relating to Primary B
               Shares is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment
               No. 27, filed May 27, 1993.

      (9)(k)   Shareholder Servicing Plan for Investor A Shares is incorporated
               by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29,
               1994.

      (9)(l)   Forms of Shareholder Servicing Agreement for Investor A Shares
               are incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 32,
               filed March 29, 1994.

      (9)(m)   Shareholder Servicing Plan for Investor B Shares of the money
               market funds and Investor C Shares (formerly Investor B Shares)
               of the non-money market funds, is incorporated by reference to
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29, 1994.

      (9)(n)   Forms of Shareholder Servicing Agreement for Investor B Shares of
               the money market funds and Investor C Shares (formerly Investor B
               Shares) of the non-money market funds, are incorporated by
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29,
               1994.

      (9)(o)   Shareholder Servicing Plan for Investor C Shares of the money
               market funds and Investor N Shares (formerly Investor C Shares)
               of the non-money market funds, is incorporated by reference to
               Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29, 1994.

      (9)(p)   Forms of Shareholder Servicing Agreement for Investor C Shares of
               the money market funds and Investor N Shares (formerly Investor C
               Shares) of the non-money market funds are incorporated by
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29,
               1994.

    (10)       Opinion and Consent of Counsel is filed herewith.

    (11)       Consent of Independent Accountants (Price Waterhouse LLP) is 
               filed herewith.

    (12)       N/A


                                       6

<PAGE>

    (13)       N/A

    (14)(a)    Prototype Individual Retirement Account Plan, is incorporated by 
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 26, filed March 26, 
               1993.

    (15)(a)    Amended and Restated Shareholder Servicing and Distribution Plan
               Pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Investor A Shares is incorporated by
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29,
               1994.

    (15)(b)    Form of Sales Support Agreement for Investor A Shares is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 32,
               filed March 29, 1994.

    (15)(c)    Amended and Restated Distribution Plan for Investor B Shares of
               the money market funds and Investor C Shares (formerly Investor B
               Shares) of the non-money market funds, is incorporated by
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29,
               1994.

    (15)(d)    Form of Sales Support Agreement for Investor B Shares of the
               money market funds and Investor C Shares (formerly Investor B
               Shares) of the non-money market funds is incorporated by
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29,
               1994.

    (15)(e)    Distribution Plan for Investor N Shares (formerly Investor C
               Shares) of the non-money market funds is incorporated by
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29,
               1994.

    (15)(f)    Form of Sales Support Agreement for Investor N Shares (formerly
               Investor C Shares) of the non-money market funds) is incorporated
               by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 32, filed March 29,
               1994.

    (15)(g)    Shareholder Administration Plan for Primary B Shares is
               incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 41,
               filed January 29, 1996.

    (16)(a)    Schedules for Computation of Primary A Shares is incorporated by
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 37, filed March 31,
               1995.

    (16)(b)    Schedules for Computation of Primary B Shares shall be filed by
               Amendment.

    (16)(c)    Schedules for Computation of Investor A Shares is incorporated by
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 37, filed March 31,
               1995.

    (16)(d)    Schedules for Computation of Investor C Shares (formerly Investor
               B Shares) is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
               Amendment No. 37, filed March 31, 1995.

                                       7
<PAGE>

    (16)(e)    Schedules for Computation of Investor N Shares (formerly Investor
               C Shares) is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
               Amendment No. 37, filed March 31, 1995.

    (16)(f)    Schedules for Computation of Investor D Shares to be filed by 
               amendment.

     (17)      N/A

     (18)      Revised Plan entered into by Registrant pursuant to Rule 18f-3
               under the Investment Company Act of 1940 is incorporated by
               reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 44, filed July 25,
               1996.

Item 25.   Persons Controlled By or Under Common Control with Registrant

                  Registrant is controlled by its Board of Trustees.

Item 26.   Number of Holders of Securities

                  The following information is as of January 24, 1997.


                                                                  Number of
Title of Class                                                  Record Holders

Nations Government Money Market Fund        - Investor A                229
                                            - Investor B                 42
                                            - Investor C                 31
                                            - Investor D                  2
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   1

Nations Tax Exempt Fund                     - Investor A              3,063
                                            - Investor B                318
                                            - Investor C                415
                                            - Investor D                  1
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   1

Nations Value Fund                          - Investor A              3,303
                                            - Investor C                290
                                            - Investor N              7,592
                                            - Primary A                  51
                                            - Primary B                   5

Nations Capital Growth Fund                 - Investor A              1,552
                                            - Investor C                241

                                       8
<PAGE>



                                            - Investor N              4,074
                                            - Primary A                  49
                                            - Primary B                   3

Nations Emerging Growth Fund                - Investor A              1,203
                                            - Investor C                118
                                            - Investor N              4,299
                                            - Primary A                  35
                                            - Primary B                   4

Nations Disciplined Equity Fund             - Investor A                448
                                            - Investor C                 37
                                            - Investor N              1,756
                                            - Primary A                   7
                                            - Primary B                   2

Nations Equity Index Fund                   - Primary A                  37
                                            - Primary B                   4
                                            - Investor A                 53

Nations Balanced Assets Fund                - Investor A                555
                                            - Investor C                 74
                                            - Investor N              3,908
                                            - Primary A                  54
                                            - Primary B                   5

Nations Short-Intermediate                  - Investor A              1,124
Government Fund                             - Investor C                340
                                            - Investor N                558
                                            - Primary A                  25
                                            - Primary B                   3

Nations Short-Term Income Fund              - Investor A                135
                                            - Investor C                107
                                            - Investor N                399
                                            - Primary A                   7
                                            - Primary B                   2

                                       9
<PAGE>


Nations Diversified Income Fund             - Investor A                490
                                            - Investor C                155
                                            - Investor N              3,933
                                            - Primary A                   8
                                            - Primary B                   2

Nations Strategic Fixed Income              - Investor A                282
Fund                                        - Investor C                 16
                                            - Investor N                130
                                            - Primary A                  58
                                            - Primary B                   5

Nations Municipal Income Fund               - Investor A                259
                                            - Investor C                 60
                                            - Investor N                378
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Intermediate Municipal              - Investor A                 37
Bond Fund                                   - Investor C                  7
                                            - Investor N                 42
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Short-Term Municipal                - Investor A                 36
Income Fund                                 - Investor C                 10
                                            - Investor N                135
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Florida Intermediate                - Investor A                 62
Municipal Bond Fund                         - Investor C                  9
                                            - Investor N                116
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Georgia Intermediate                - Investor A                173
Municipal Bond Fund                         - Investor C                 47
                                            - Investor N                177
                                            - Primary A                   7
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Maryland Intermediate               - Investor A                286
Municipal Bond Fund                         - Investor C                 68
                                            - Investor N                212

                                       10

<PAGE>

                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations North Carolina Intermediate         - Investor A                110
Municipal Bond Fund                         - Investor C                 31
                                            - Investor N                205
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations South Carolina Intermediate         - Investor A                166
Municipal Bond Fund                         - Investor C                105
                                            - Investor N                202
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Tennessee Intermediate              - Investor A                 66
Municipal Bond Fund                         - Investor C                  2
                                            - Investor N                 67
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Texas Intermediate                  - Investor A                 20
Municipal Bond Fund                         - Investor C                  3
                                            - Investor N                 88
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Virginia Intermediate               - Investor A                835
Municipal Bond Fund                         - Investor C                127
                                            - Investor N                384
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Virginia Municipal Bond             - Investor A                 18
Fund                                        - Investor C                  3
                                            - Investor N                500
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Maryland Municipal Bond             - Investor A                 12
Fund                                        - Investor C                  2
                                            - Investor N                340
                                            - Primary A                   2
                                            - Primary B                   0

                                       11
<PAGE>


Nations North Carolina Municipal            - Investor A                 26
Bond Fund                                   - Investor C                  3
                                            - Investor N                652
                                            - Primary A                   2
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations South Carolina Municipal            - Investor A                 12
Bond Fund                                   - Investor C                  4
                                            - Investor N                271
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Florida Municipal Bond Fund         - Investor A                 11
                                            - Investor C                  3
                                            - Investor N                477
                                            - Primary A                   1
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Georgia Municipal Bond Fund         - Investor A                  6
                                            - Investor C                  3
                                            - Investor N                310
                                            - Primary A                   2
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Tennessee Municipal Bond            - Investor A                  8
Fund                                        - Investor C                  3
                                            - Investor N                147
                                            - Primary A                   2
                                            - Primary B                   0

Nations Texas Municipal Bond Fund           - Investor A                 11
                                            - Investor C                  3
                                            - Investor N                283
                                            - Primary A                   2
                                            - Primary B                   0

Item 27. Indemnification

        Article IX, Section 9.3 of Registrant's Declaration of Trust,
        incorporated by reference as Exhibit (1)(a) hereto, provides for the
        indemnification of Registrant's trustees and employees. Indemnification
        of Registrant's administrator, principal underwriter, custodian, and
        transfer agent is provided for, respectively, in:

              1.    Administration Agreement with Stephens Inc.;

  
                                       12

<PAGE>

              2.    Co-Administration Agreement with  First Data Investors 
                    Services Group, Inc.;

              3.    Distribution Agreement with Stephens Inc.;

              4.    Mutual Fund Custody Agreement with NationsBank Texas;

              5.    Transfer Agency Agreement with NationsBank Texas; and

              6.   Transfer Agency and Registrar Agreement with First Data
                   Investors Services Group, Inc.

              The Registrant has entered into a Cross Indemnification Agreement
with Nations Fund, Inc. (the "Company") and Nations Fund Portfolios,
Inc.("Portfolios"), dated June 27, 1995. The Company and or Portfolios will
indemnify and hold harmless the Trust against any losses, claims, damages or
liabilities, to which the Trust may become subject, under the Securities Act of
1933 (the "Act") and the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act") insofar
as such losses, claims, damages or liabilities (or actions in respect thereof)
arise out of or are based upon an untrue statement or alleged untrue statement
of a material fact contained in any Prospectuses, any Preliminary Prospectuses,
the Registration Statements, any other Prospectuses relating to the securities,
or any amendments or supplements to the foregoing (hereinafter referred to
collectively as the "Offering Documents"), or arise out of or are based upon the
omission to state therein a material fact required to be stated therein or
necessary to make the statements therein not misleading, in each case to the
extent, but only to the extent, that such untrue statement or alleged untrue
statement or omission or alleged omission was made in the Offering Documents in
reliance upon and in conformity with written information furnished to the
Primary By the Company and/or Portfolios expressly for use therein; and will
reimburse the Trust for any legal or other expenses reasonably incurred by the
Trust in connection with investigating or defending any such action or claim;
provided, however, that the Company and/or Portfolios shall not be liable in any
such case to the extent that any such loss, claim, damage, or liability arises
out of or is based upon an untrue statement or alleged untrue statement or
omission or alleged omission made in the Offering Documents in reliance upon and
in conformity with written information furnished to the Company and/or
Portfolios by the Trust expressly for use in the Offering Documents.

              Promptly after receipt by an indemnified party above of notice of
the commencement of any action, such indemnified party shall, if a claim in
respect thereof is to be made against the indemnifying party under such
subsection, notify the indemnifying party in writing of the commencement
thereof; but the omission to so notify the indemnifying party shall not relieve
it from any liability which it may have to any indemnified party otherwise than
under such subsection. In case any such action shall be brought against any
indemnified party and it shall notify the indemnifying party of the commencement
thereof, the indemnifying party shall be entitled to participate therein and, to
the extent that it shall wish, to assume the defense thereof, with counsel
satisfactory to such indemnified party, and, after notice from the indemnifying
party to such indemnified party of its election so to assume the defense
thereof, the indemnifying party shall not be liable to such indemnified party
under such subsection for any legal expenses of other

                                       13

<PAGE>

counsel  or any other  expenses,  in each  case  subsequently  incurred  by such
indemnified  party, in connection with the defense thereof other than reasonable
costs of investigation.

              Registrant has obtained from a major insurance carrier a
directors' and officers' liability policy covering certain types of errors and
omissions. In no event will Registrant indemnify any of its trustees, officers,
employees, or agents against any liability to which such person would otherwise
be subject by reason of his/her willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence
in the performance of his/her duties, or by reason of his reckless disregard of
the duties involved in the conduct of his/her office or arising under his/her
agreement with Registrant. Registrant will comply with Rule 484 under the
Securities Act of 1933 and Release No. 11330 under the 1940 Act, as amended, in
connection with any indemnification.

              Insofar as indemnification for liability arising under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, may be permitted to trustees, officers, and
controlling persons of Registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or
otherwise, Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities and
Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed
in the Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for
indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by Registrant
of expenses incurred or paid by a trustee, officer, or controlling person of
Registrant in the successful defense of any action, suit, or proceeding) is
asserted by such trustee, officer, or controlling person in connection with the
securities being registered, Registrant will, unless in the opinion of its
counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court
of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is
against public policy as expressed in the Act and will be governed by the final
adjudication of such issue.

Item 28.      Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser

         (a) To the knowledge of Registrant, none of the directors or officers
of NBAI, the adviser to the Registrant's portfolios, or TradeStreet, the
sub-investment adviser, except those set forth below, is or has been, at any
time during the past two calendar years, engaged in any other business,
profession, vocation or employment of a substantial nature, except that certain
directors and officers also hold various positions with, and engage in business
for, the company that owns all the outstanding stock (other than directors'
qualifying shares) of NBAI or TradeStreet, respectively, or other subsidiaries
of NationsBank Corporation.

         (b) NBAI performs investment advisory services for the Registrant and
certain other customers. NBAI is a wholly owned subsidiary of NationsBank, N.A.
("NationsBank"), which in turn is a wholly owned banking subsidiary of
NationsBank Corporation. Information with respect to each director and officer
of the investment adviser is incorporated by reference to Form ADV filed by NBAI
with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940 (file no. 801-49874).

         (c) TradeStreet performs sub-investment advisory services for the
Registrant and certain other customers. TradeStreet is a wholly owned subsidiary
of NationsBank, which in turn is a wholly owned banking subsidiary of
NationsBank Corporation. Information with respect to each director and officer
of the sub-investment adviser is incorporated by reference to Form filed


                                     14
<PAGE>




by  TradeStreet  with the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission  pursuant to the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (file no. 801-50372).


Item 29.      Principal Underwriter

      (a) Stephens Inc., distributor for the Registrant, does not presently act
as investment adviser for any other registered investment companies, but does
act as principal underwriter for the Overland Express Funds, Inc., Stagecoach
Inc., Stagecoach Funds, Inc. and Stagecoach Trust and is the exclusive placement
agent for Master Investment Trust, Managed Series Investment Trust, Life &
Annuity Trust and Master Investment Portfolio, all of which are registered
open-end management investment companies, and has acted as principal underwriter
for the Liberty Term Trust, Inc., Nations Government Income Term Trust 2003,
Inc., Nations Government Income Term Trust 2004, Inc. and the Managed Balanced
Target Maturity Fund, Inc., closed-end management investment companies.

      (b) Information with respect to each director and officer of the principal
underwriter is incorporated by reference to Form ADV filed by Stephens Inc. with
the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act
of 1940 (file #501-15510).

      (c)     Not applicable.

Item 30.      Location of Accounts and Records

      (1) NBAI, One NationsBank Plaza, Charlotte, North Carolina 28255 (records
        relating to its function as Investment Adviser).

      (2) TradeStreet, One NationsBank Plaza, Charlotte, North Carolina 28255
        (records relating to its function as sub-adviser).

      (3) Stephens Inc., 111 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201 (records
        relating to its function as Distributor).

      (4) Stephens Inc., 111 Center Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201 (records
        relating to its function as Administrator).

      (5) The First Data Investors Services Group, Inc., One Exchange Place,
        Boston, Massachusetts 02109 (records relating to its function as
        Co-Administrator and Transfer Agent).

      (6) NationsBank Texas, 1401 Elm Street, Dallas, Texas 75202 (records
        relating to its function as Sub-Transfer Agent and Custodian).


                                       15

<PAGE>

Item 31.      Management Services

      Inapplicable.

Item 32.      Undertakings

      (a)     Registrant undertakes to call a meeting for the purpose of voting
              upon the question or removal of a trustee or trustees when
              requested in writing to do so by the holders of at least 10% of a
              Fund's outstanding shares of beneficial interest and in connection
              with such meeting to comply with the provisions of Section 16(c)
              of the 1940 Act, as amended, relating to shareholder
              communications.

      (b)     Registrant undertakes to furnish each person to whom a prospectus
              is delivered with a copy of the Registrant's most recent annual
              report to shareholder upon request and without charge.



                                       16

<PAGE>

                                  SIGNATURES

      Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant certifies that it meets all the
requirements for effectiveness of this Post-Effective Amendment to the
Registration Statement pursuant to Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933
and has duly caused this Amendment to its Registration Statement to be signed on
its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Little
Rock, State of Arkansas on the 27th day of February, 1997.

                                    NATIONS FUND TRUST


                                    By:                  *
                                        -------------------------------------
                                                 A. Max Walker
                                               President and Chairman
                                               of the Board of Trustees

                                    By:   /s/ Richard H. Blank, Jr.
                                        -------------------------------------
                                               Richard H. Blank, Jr.
                                               *Attorney-in-Fact

      Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
Post-Effective Amendment to the Registration Statement has been signed below by
the following persons in the capacities and on the date indicated:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

          SIGNATURES                                    TITLE                                 DATE

<S>                                           <C>                                      <C>
                *                               President and Chair                    February 27, 1997
- ----------------------------------
(A. Max Walker)                               of the Board of Trustees
                                              (Principal Executive Officer)

                *                                     Treasurer                        February 27, 1997
- ----------------------------------
(Richard H. Rose)                                  Vice President
                                                (Principal Financial and
                                                 Accounting Officer)

                *                                      Trustee                         February 27, 1997
- ----------------------------------
(Edmund L. Benson, III)

                *                                      Trustee                         February 27, 1997
- ----------------------------------
(James Ermer)

                *                                      Trustee                         February 27, 1997
- ----------------------------------
(William H. Grigg)

                *                                      Trustee                         February 27, 1997
- ----------------------------------
(Thomas F. Keller)

                *                                      Trustee                         February 27, 1997
- ----------------------------------
(Carl E. Mundy, Jr.)

                *                                      Trustee                         February 27, 1997
- ----------------------------------
(Charles B. Walker)

                *                                      Trustee                         February 27, 1997
- ----------------------------------
(Thomas S. Word)

  /s/ Richard H. Blank, Jr.
- -----------------------------------
Richard H. Blank, Jr.
*Attorney-in-Fact



</TABLE>

<PAGE>

                                EXHIBIT INDEX

EXHIBIT                                                               PAGE
NUMBER                                DESCRIPTION                     NUMBER


EX-99.B10        OPIN COUNS

EX-99.B11        OTH CONSNT







                                                                      EX-99.B10

                      [MORRISON & FOERSTER LLP LETTERHEAD]



                                February 28, 1997




Nations Fund Trust
111 Center Street
Little Rock, Arkansas  72201

              Re:    Units of Beneficial Interest in the
                     Funds of the Nations Fund Trust

Gentlemen:

              We refer to Post-Effective Amendment No. 46 and Amendment No. 48
to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A (SEC File No. 2-97817; 811-4305) (the
"Registration Statement") of Nations Fund Trust (the "Trust") relating to the
registration of an indefinite number of units of Beneficial Interest in Funds of
the Trust (collectively, the "Shares").

              We have been requested by the Trust to furnish this opinion as 
Exhibit 10 to the Registration Statement.

              We have examined such records, documents, instruments,
certificates of public officials and of the Trust, made such inquiries of the
Trust, and examined such questions of law as we have deemed necessary for the
purpose of rendering the opinion set forth herein. We have assumed the
genuineness of all signatures and the authenticity of all items submitted to us
as originals and the conformity with originals of all items submitted to us as
copies.

              Based upon and subject to the foregoing, we are of the opinion
that:

              The issuance and sale of the Shares by the Trust have been duly
and validly authorized by all appropriate action and, assuming delivery by sale
or in accord with the Trust's dividend reinvestment plan in accordance with the
description set forth in the Registration Statement, as amended, the Shares will
be validly issued, fully paid and nonassessable.



<PAGE>

Nations Fund Trust
February 28, 1997
Page 2


              We consent to the inclusion of this opinion as an exhibit to the
Registration Statement.

              In addition, we hereby consent to the use of our name and to the
reference to our firm under the caption "Counsel" in the Statement of Additional
Information, and the description of advice rendered by our firm under the
heading "How The Funds Are Managed" in the Prospectuses, which are included as
part of the Registration Statement.

                             Very truly yours,

                             /S/  MORRISON & FOERSTER LLP

                             MORRISON & FOERSTER LLP






                                                                      EX-99.B11

                        [PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP LETTERHEAD]



                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS


We hereby consent to the incorporation by reference in the Prospectuses and
Statement of Additional Information constituting parts of this Post-Effective
Amendment No. 46 under the Securities Act of 1933 to the registration statement
on Form N-1A (the "Registration Statement") of our report dated May 17, 1996,
relating to the financial statements and financial highlights appearing in the
March 31, 1996 Annual Reports to Shareholders of Nations Fund Trust, which are
also incorporated by reference into the Registration Statement. We also consent
to the references to us under the headings "Financial Highlights" and "Other
Service Providers" in the Prospectuses and under the heading "Independent
Accountant and Reports" in the Statement of Additional Information.


/s/ Price Waterhouse LLP
PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
February 28, 1997






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