WITTER DEAN CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES TRUST
497, 1996-02-06
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<PAGE>
                        DEAN WITTER
                        CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES TRUST
                        PROSPECTUS--JANUARY 31, 1996

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DEAN WITTER CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES TRUST (THE "FUND") IS AN OPEN-END DIVERSIFIED
MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANY WHOSE INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE IS TO SEEK A HIGH LEVEL
OF  TOTAL  RETURN ON  ITS ASSETS  THROUGH  A COMBINATION  OF CURRENT  INCOME AND
CAPITAL APPRECIATION. IT SEEKS TO ACHIEVE ITS INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE BY  INVESTING
PRINCIPALLY  IN  "CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES,"  THAT  IS, BONDS,  NOTES, DEBENTURES,
PREFERRED STOCKS AND OTHER SECURITIES  WHICH ARE CONVERTIBLE INTO COMMON  STOCK.
INVESTORS  SHOULD CAREFULLY  CONSIDER THE  RELATIVE RISKS  OF INVESTING  IN HIGH
YIELD SECURITIES, WHICH ARE COMMONLY KNOWN AS JUNK BONDS. BONDS OF THIS TYPE ARE
CONSIDERED TO BE SPECULATIVE WITH REGARD  TO THE PAYMENT OF INTEREST AND  RETURN
OF  PRINCIPAL.  INVESTORS  SHOULD  ALSO  BE  COGNIZANT  OF  THE  FACT  THAT SUCH
SECURITIES ARE NOT GENERALLY  MEANT FOR SHORT-TERM  INVESTING AND SHOULD  ASSESS
THE  RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH AN INVESTMENT IN THE FUND. (SEE "INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE
AND POLICIES").

Shares of  the Fund  are continuously  offered at  net asset  value without  the
imposition  of  a  sales  charge. However,  redemptions  and/or  repurchases are
subject in most cases to a contingent deferred sales charge, scaled down from 5%
to 1% of the amount redeemed, if made within six years of purchase, which charge
will be  paid to  the Fund's  Distributor, Dean  Witter Distributors  Inc.  (See
"Redemptions  and Repurchases--Contingent Deferred  Sales Charge.") In addition,
the Fund pays the Distributor a Rule  12b-1 distribution fee pursuant to a  Plan
of  Distribution at the annual rate of 1% of the lesser of the (i) average daily
aggregate net sales or (ii) average daily net assets of the Fund. (See "Purchase
of Fund Shares--Plan of Distribution.")

This Prospectus  sets forth  concisely the  information you  should know  before
investing  in the  Fund. It  should be read  and retained  for future reference.
Additional  information  about  the  Fund  is  contained  in  the  Statement  of
Additional  Information, dated January  31, 1996, which has  been filed with the
Securities and Exchange  Commission, and which  is available at  no charge  upon
request of the Fund at the address or telephone numbers listed on this page. The
Statement of Additional Information is incorporated herein by reference.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TABLE OF CONTENTS

<S>                                                 <C>
Prospectus Summary................................       2

Summary of Fund Expenses..........................       3

Financial Highlights..............................       4

The Fund and its Management.......................       5

Investment Objective and Policies.................       5

  Risk Considerations.............................       6

Investment Restrictions...........................      10

Purchase of Fund Shares...........................      10

Shareholder Services..............................      12

Redemptions and Repurchases.......................      14

Dividends, Distributions and Taxes................      15

Performance Information...........................      16

Additional Information............................      16

Appendix--Ratings of Investments..................      18
</TABLE>

SHARES OF THE FUND ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED OR ENDORSED
BY,  ANY BANK, AND THE  SHARES ARE NOT FEDERALLY  INSURED BY THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT
INSURANCE CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD, OR ANY OTHER AGENCY.

DEAN WITTER
CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES TRUST
TWO WORLD TRADE CENTER
NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10048

(212) 392-2550 or (800) 869-NEWS (toll-free)

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  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.

                   DEAN WITTER DISTRIBUTORS INC., DISTRIBUTOR
<PAGE>
PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<S>               <C>
THE FUND          The  Fund is organized  as a Trust,  commonly known as  a Massachusetts business  trust, and is an
                  open-end diversified management investment company  investing principally in corporate  securities
                  that can be converted into common stock.
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SHARES OFFERED    Shares of beneficial interest with $0.01 par value (see page 16).
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

OFFERING          At  net  asset value  without sales  charge (see  page 10).  Shares redeemed  within six  years of
PRICE             purchase are subject to a contingent deferred sales charge under most circumstances (see page 14).
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MINIMUM           Minimum initial investment, $1,000 ($100 if  the account is opened through EasyInvestSM);  minimum
PURCHASE          subsequent investment, $100 (see page 10).
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

INVESTMENT        The investment objective of the Fund is to seek a high level of total return on its assets through
OBJECTIVE         a  combination of current income  and capital appreciation. It seeks  to achieve this objective by
                  investing principally in  "convertible securities,"  that is bonds,  notes, debentures,  preferred
                  stocks and other securities which are convertible into common stock.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

INVESTMENT        Dean  Witter  InterCapital Inc.  ("InterCapital"),  the Investment  Manager  of the  Fund  and its
MANAGER           wholly-owned  subsidiary,  Dean  Witter  Services  Company  Inc.,  serve  in  various   investment
                  management, advisory, management and administrative capacities to ninety-five investment companies
                  and other portfolios with assets of approximately $79.5 billion at December 31, 1995 (see page 5).
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MANAGEMENT        The  Investment Manager receives a monthly fee at the annual  rate of 0.60 of 1% of the Fund's net
FEE               assets not exceeding  $750 million, scaled  down at  various asset levels  to 0.425 of  1% of  the
                  Fund's  daily net assets  exceeding $3 billion, determined  as of the close  of each business day.
                  (see page 5).
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DIVIDENDS AND     Income dividends paid quarterly; Capital gains, if any, paid at least once per year. Dividends and
CAPITAL GAINS     capital gains  distributions automatically  reinvested in  additional shares  at net  asset  value
DISTRIBUTIONS     (without sales charge), unless the shareholder elects to receive cash. (see page 15).
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DISTRIBUTOR       Dean  Witter  Distributors Inc.  (the "Distributor").  The  Distributor receives  from the  Fund a
                  distribution fee, accrued daily and payable monthly, at the rate of 1% per annum of the lesser  of
                  (i) the Fund's average daily aggregate net sales or (ii) the Fund's average daily net assets. This
                  fee  compensates the Distributor for the services provided  in distributing shares of the Fund and
                  for sales-related expenses. The Distributor also receives the proceeds of any contingent  deferred
                  sales charges (see page 11).
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

REDEMPTION--      Shares  are redeemable  by the  shareholder at net  asset value.  An account  may be involuntarily
CONTINGENT        redeemed if the total value of the account is less than $100 or, if the account was opened through
DEFERRED SALES    EasyInvestSM, if after twelve months the shareholder has invested less than $1,000 in the account.
CHARGE            Although no commission or sales load is imposed upon the purchase of shares, a contingent deferred
                  sales charge (scaled down  from 5% to  1%) is imposed on  any redemption of  shares if after  such
                  redemption  the aggregate  current value  of an account  with the  Fund falls  below the aggregate
                  amount of the investor's  purchase payments made  during the six  years preceding the  redemption.
                  However,  there is  no charge imposed  on redemption  of shares purchased  through reinvestment of
                  dividends or distributions (see pages 14-15).
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

TAX-SHELTERED     You can take advantage of tax benefits for  personal retirement accounts by investing in the  Fund
RETIREMENT        through  an IRA (Individual Retirement  Account) or Custodial Account  under Section 403(b) (7) of
PLANS             the Internal Revenue Code (see page 12).
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

RISKS             The net asset value of the  Fund's shares will fluctuate with changes  in the market value of  its
                  portfolio  securities. Emphasis on convertible securities will result in price fluctuations of the
                  Fund's portfolio securities  with varying interest  rates and with  changes in the  prices of  the
                  common  stocks associated with their  conversion rights. In addition,  the investor is directed to
                  the discussions  of  corporate  fixed-income securities  (certain  of  which may  be  lower  rated
                  securities  commonly known as  "junk bonds" or  securities which are  unrated by recognized rating
                  agencies), when-issued and delayed  delivery securities and forward  commitments, when, as and  if
                  issued  securities,  options, futures  contracts, foreign  securities, repurchase  agreements, and
                  options on futures (see pages 6 through 9).
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

  THE ABOVE IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY THE DETAILED INFORMATION APPEARING
                          ELSEWHERE IN THIS PROSPECTUS
                AND IN THE STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.

2
<PAGE>
SUMMARY OF FUND EXPENSES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The  following table illustrates all expenses and fees that a shareholder of the
Fund will incur. The expenses and fees set forth in the table are for the fiscal
year ended September 30, 1995.

<TABLE>
<S>                                                 <C>
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES
Maximum Sales Charge Imposed on Purchases.........   None
Maximum Sales Charge Imposed on Reinvested
 Dividends........................................   None
Deferred Sales Charge
 (as a percentage of the lesser of original
 purchase price or redemption proceeds)...........   5.0%
</TABLE>

 A deferred sales charge is imposed at the following declining rates:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
YEAR SINCE PURCHASE PAYMENT MADE                    PERCENTAGE
- --------------------------------------------------  -----------
<S>                                                 <C>
First.............................................      5.0%
Second............................................      4.0%
Third.............................................      3.0%
Fourth............................................      2.0%
Fifth.............................................      2.0%
Sixth.............................................      1.0%
Seventh and thereafter............................     None
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<S>                                                 <C>
Redemption Fee....................................   None
Exchange Fee......................................   None

ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES (AS A PERCENTAGE OF
 AVERAGE NET ASSETS)
Management Fee....................................  0.60%
12b-1 Fees*.......................................  1.00%
Other Expenses....................................  0.36%
Total Fund Operating Expenses.....................  1.96%
<FN>
- ------------------------
* A portion of the 12b-1 fee equal to 0.25% of the Fund's average daily net
  assets is characterized as a service fee within the meaning of National
  Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD") guidelines. (see "Purchase of
  Fund Shares")
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    10
EXAMPLE                                             1 YEAR    3 YEARS   5 YEARS    YEARS
- --------------------------------------------------  -------   -------   -------   -------
<S>                                                 <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
You would pay the  following expenses on a  $1,000
 investment, assuming (1) 5% annual return and (2)
 redemption at the end of each time period:.......    $70       $91       $126      $228
You  would pay the following  expenses on the same
 investment, assuming no redemption:..............    $20       $61       $106      $228
</TABLE>

THE ABOVE EXAMPLE SHOULD  NOT BE CONSIDERED A  REPRESENTATION OF PAST OR  FUTURE
EXPENSES OR PERFORMANCE. ACTUAL EXPENSES OF THE FUND MAY BE GREATER OR LESS THAN
THOSE SHOWN.

The purpose of this table is to assist the investor in understanding the various
costs  and  expenses  that  an  investor  in  the  Fund  will  bear  directly or
indirectly. For a  more complete description  of these costs  and expenses,  see
"The  Fund  and its  Management," "Plan  of  Distribution" and  "Redemptions and
Repurchases."

Long-term  shareholders  of  the  Fund  may  pay  more  in  sales  charges   and
distribution  fees than the  economic equivalent of  the maximum front-end sales
charges permitted by the NASD.

                                                                               3
<PAGE>
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The  following ratios  and per  share data  for a  share of  beneficial interest
outstanding throughout each period  have been audited  by Price Waterhouse  LLP,
independent  accountants. The financial highlights should be read in conjunction
with the  financial statements,  notes thereto,  and the  unqualified report  of
independent  accountants  which are  contained  in the  Statement  of Additional
Information. Further information about the performance of the Fund is  contained
in  the  Fund's Annual  Report to  Shareholders, which  may be  obtained without
charge upon request to the Fund.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          FOR THE YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30
                        ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                          1995        1994       1993       1992       1991       1990       1989        1988        1987
                        ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   ---------   ---------   ---------
<S>                     <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>         <C>         <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
 PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value,
  beginning of
  period..............  $10.75      $10.62     $8.92      $8.67      $7.65      $9.68      $ 8.63      $12.42      $11.22
                        ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   ---------   ---------   ---------
  Net investment
   income.............   0.60        0.42       0.37       0.34       0.37       0.46        0.48        0.38        0.48
  Net realized and
   unrealized gain
   (loss).............   0.82        0.11       1.67       0.15       1.05      (2.06  )     1.20       (2.87  )     1.59
                        ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   ---------   ---------   ---------
  Total from
   investment
   operations.........   1.42        0.53       2.04       0.49       1.42      (1.60  )     1.68       (2.49  )     2.07
                        ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   ---------   ---------   ---------
  Less dividends and
   distributions from:
    Net investment
     income...........  (0.50  )    (0.40  )   (0.34  )   (0.24  )   (0.40  )   (0.43  )    (0.63  )    (0.23  )    (0.46  )
    Net realized
     gain.............     --          --         --         --         --         --          --       (1.07  )    (0.41  )
                        ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   ---------   ---------   ---------
  Total dividends and
   distributions......  (0.50  )    (0.40  )   (0.34  )   (0.24  )   (0.40  )   (0.43  )    (0.63  )    (1.30  )    (0.87  )
                        ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   ---------   ---------   ---------
  Net asset value, end
   of period..........  $11.67      $10.75     $10.62     $8.92      $8.67      $7.65      $ 9.68      $ 8.63      $12.42
                        ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   ---------   ---------   ---------
                        ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   ---------   ---------   ---------
TOTAL INVESTMENT
 RETURN+..............  13.68  %     5.02  %   23.22  %    5.69  %   18.93  %   (16.93 )%   20.20  %   (19.79  )%   19.21  %
RATIOS TO AVERAGE NET
 ASSETS:
  Expenses............   1.96  %     1.93  %    1.93  %    1.92  %    1.92  %    1.88  %     1.76  %     1.79  %     1.62  %
  Net investment
   income.............   5.24  %     3.68  %    3.44  %    3.43  %    4.34  %    4.96  %     4.93  %     3.87  %     3.85  %
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
  Net assets, end of
   period, in
   millions...........   $185        $190       $208       $218       $297       $413        $822      $1,073      $2,029
  Portfolio turnover
   rate...............    138  %      184  %     221  %     145  %     133  %      92  %      167  %      472  %      572  %

<CAPTION>
                         FOR THE
                          PERIOD
                         OCTOBER
                        31, 1985*
                         THROUGH
                        SEPTEMBER
                         30, 1986
                        ----------
<S>                     <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
 PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value,
  beginning of
  period..............  $10.00
                        ----------
  Net investment
   income.............    0.76
  Net realized and
   unrealized gain
   (loss).............    1.22  **
                        ----------
  Total from
   investment
   operations.........    1.98
                        ----------
  Less dividends and
   distributions from:
    Net investment
     income...........   (0.76  )
    Net realized
     gain.............      --
                        ----------
  Total dividends and
   distributions......   (0.76  )
                        ----------
  Net asset value, end
   of period..........  $11.22
                        ----------
                        ----------
TOTAL INVESTMENT
 RETURN+..............   19.91  %(1)
RATIOS TO AVERAGE NET
 ASSETS:
  Expenses............    1.72  %(2)
  Net investment
   income.............    7.11  %(2)
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
  Net assets, end of
   period, in
   millions...........  $1,488
  Portfolio turnover
   rate...............     272  %(1)
<FN>
- --------------------------
 *  COMMENCEMENT OF OPERATIONS.
 **  INCLUDES THE EFFECT OF CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS.
 +  DOES NOT REFLECT THE DEDUCTION OF SALES CHARGE.
(1) NOT ANNUALIZED.
(2) ANNUALIZED.
</TABLE>

4
<PAGE>
THE FUND AND ITS MANAGEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust (the "Fund") is an open-end diversified
management investment company. The Fund is a trust of the type commonly known as
a "Massachusetts  business  trust" and  was  organized  under the  laws  of  the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts on May 21, 1985.

    Dean  Witter InterCapital Inc. ("InterCapital" or the "Investment Manager"),
whose address is Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048, is the Fund's
Investment Manager.  The Investment  Manager, which  was incorporated  in  July,
1992,  is a wholly-owned subsidiary  of Dean Witter, Discover  & Co. ("DWDC"), a
balanced financial services organization providing  a broad range of  nationally
marketed credit and investment products.

    InterCapital  and its wholly-owned subsidiary,  Dean Witter Services Company
Inc.,  serve  in  various   investment  management,  advisory,  management   and
administrative  capacities to ninety-five investment  companies, thirty of which
are listed on the  New York Stock  Exchange, with combined  total net assets  of
approximately $76.9 billion as of December 31, 1995. The Investment Manager also
manages  and advises managers of portfolios of pension plans, other institutions
and individuals which aggregated approximately $2.6 billion at such date.

    The Fund  has  retained the  Investment  Manager to  provide  administrative
services,  manage its business  affairs and manage the  investment of the Fund's
assets, including the placing of orders  for the purchase and sale of  portfolio
securities.  InterCapital  has retained  Dean  Witter Services  Company  Inc. to
perform the aforementioned administrative services for the Fund.

    The Fund's Trustees  review the various  services provided by  or under  the
direction of the Investment Manager to ensure that the Fund's general investment
policies  and programs  are being properly  carried out  and that administrative
services are being provided to the Fund in a satisfactory manner.

    As full compensation for the services  and facilities furnished to the  Fund
and  for expenses of the  Fund assumed by the  Investment Manager, the Fund pays
the Investment Manager  monthly compensation  calculated daily  by applying  the
following  annual rates to the  Fund's net assets determined  as of the close of
each business day: 0.60% of  the portion of the  daily net assets not  exceeding
$750  million, scaled down at  various asset levels to  0.425% of the portion of
the daily net assets exceeding $3  billion. For the fiscal year ended  September
30,  1995,  the  Fund  accrued  total  compensation  to  the  Investment Manager
amounting to 0.60% of the Fund's average  daily net assets and the Fund's  total
expenses amounted to 1.96% of the Fund's average daily net assets.

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The  investment objective of the Fund is to seek a high level of total return on
its assets through  a combination  of current income  and capital  appreciation.
There  is no assurance that this objective will be achieved. It is a fundamental
policy of  the Fund  and cannot  be changed  without shareholder  approval.  The
following  policies  may  be  changed  by  the  Trustees  of  the  Fund  without
shareholder approval.

    (1) The Fund will normally invest at least 65% of its total assets (taken at
current value) in "convertible securities," i.e., securities (bonds, debentures,
corporate notes, preferred  stocks and other  securities) which are  convertible
into  common stock. Securities  received upon conversion may  be retained in the
Fund's portfolio to permit orderly disposition or to establish long-term holding
periods for federal income tax purposes. The Fund is not required to sell  these
securities  for the purpose of  assuring that 65% of  its assets are invested in
convertible securities.

    (2) The Fund  may invest up  to 35% of  its total assets  (taken at  current
value and subject to any restrictions appearing elsewhere in this Prospectus) in
any  combination and quantity of the following securities: (a) common stock; (b)
nonconvertible preferred stock;  (c) nonconvertible  corporate debt  securities;
(d)  options on debt and equity  securities; (e) financial futures contracts and
related options thereon; and (f) money market instruments.

    (3) Notwithstanding paragraphs  (1) and  (2) above,  when market  conditions
dictate  a "defensive" investment strategy, the Fund may invest without limit in
money market instruments, including  commercial paper, certificates of  deposit,
bankers'  acceptances  and  other  obligations  of  domestic  banks  or domestic
branches of foreign banks, or foreign  branches of domestic banks, in each  case
having  total  assets  of  at  least $500  million,  and  obligations  issued or
guaranteed by  the United  States Government,  or foreign  governments or  their
respective instrumentalities or agencies.

    The Fund may invest in fixed-income securities rated Baa or lower by Moody's
Investors  Service,  Inc. ("Moody's"),  or  BBB or  lower  by Standard  & Poor's
Corporation ("S&P"). Fixed-income securities rated Baa by Moody's or BBB by  S&P
have  speculative characteristics greater than those of more highly rated bonds,
while fixed-income  securities rated  Ba or  BB  or lower  by Moody's  and  S&P,
respectively,  are considered  to be  speculative investments.  Furthermore, the
Fund does not have any minimum  quality rating standard for its investments.  As
such,  the  Fund  may  invest  in  securities rated  as  low  as  Caa,  Ca  or C

                                                                               5
<PAGE>
by Moody's or CCC, CC, C or C1  by S&P. Fixed-income securities rated Caa or  Ca
by  Moody's may already be in default on payment of interest or principal, while
bonds rated C by Moody's,  their lowest bond rating,  can be regarded as  having
extremely  poor prospects of ever attaining  any real investment standing. Bonds
rated C1  by  S&P, their  lowest  bond rating,  are  no longer  making  interest
payments.

    Non-rated securities are also considered for investment by the Fund when the
Investment  Manager believes that the financial condition of the issuers of such
securities,  or  the  protection  afforded  by  the  terms  of  the   securities
themselves, makes them appropriate investments for the Fund.

    A  general description  of Moody's  and S&P's  ratings is  set forth  in the
Appendix at the end of this Prospectus.

RISK CONSIDERATIONS

CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES.  The Fund will seek to meet its investment objective  by
investing   primarily  in   convertible  securities   in  accordance   with  the
above-stated policies. Investments in these securities can provide a high  level
of total return by virtue of their affording current income through interest and
dividend  payments  and  because of  the  opportunity they  provide  for capital
appreciation by virtue of their convertibility  into common stock. The Fund  may
invest  in investment  grade convertible securities  which are  rated within the
four highest categories by recognized rating agencies; i.e., S & P and  Moody's,
as  well as in such securities  which are lower rated or  which are not rated by
such agencies. See the Statement of  Additional Information for a discussion  of
S&P and Moody's ratings.

    Convertible  securities  rank senior  to  common stocks  in  a corporation's
capital structure and, therefore, entail less risk than the corporation's common
stock. The value  of a  convertible security is  a function  of its  "investment
value"  (its  value as  if  it did  not have  a  conversion privilege),  and its
"conversion value" (the  security's worth  if it were  to be  exchanged for  the
underlying security, at market value, pursuant to its conversion privilege).

    To the extent that a convertible security's investment value is greater than
its  conversion  value,  its  price  will  be  primarily  a  reflection  of such
investment value and its  price will be likely  to increase when interest  rates
fall and decrease when interest rates rise, as with a fixed-income security (the
credit  standing of the issuer and other factors  may also have an effect on the
convertible security's value).  If the conversion  value exceeds the  investment
value,  the price  of the  convertible security  will rise  above its investment
value and, in  addition, will sell  at some premium  over its conversion  value.
(This  premium  represents  the  price  investors are  willing  to  pay  for the
privilege of purchasing a  fixed-income security with  a possibility of  capital
appreciation  due to the conversion  privilege.) At such times  the price of the
convertible security  will tend  to fluctuate  directly with  the price  of  the
underlying  equity security. Convertible securities may be purchased by the Fund
at varying price levels  above their investment  values and/or their  conversion
values in keeping with the Fund's objective.

ZERO  COUPON SECURITIES.  A portion of  the securities purchased by the Fund may
be zero coupon  securities. Such  securities are  purchased at  a discount  from
their face amount, giving the purchaser the right to receive their full value at
maturity.  The interest earned on  such securities is, implicitly, automatically
compounded and paid out at maturity.  While such compounding at a constant  rate
eliminates  the risk of receiving lower  yields upon reinvestment of interest if
prevailing interest rates decline, the owner  of a zero coupon security will  be
unable to participate in higher yields upon reinvestment of interest received on
interest-paying securities if prevailing interest rates rise.

    A  zero coupon  security pays  no interest  to its  holder during  its life.
Therefore, to the extent the Fund invests in zero coupon securities, it will not
receive current cash  available for distribution  to shareholders. In  addition,
zero  coupon securities are subject  to substantially greater price fluctuations
during periods  of  changing  prevailing  interest  rates  than  are  comparable
securities  which  pay interest  on  a current  basis.  Current federal  tax law
requires that a holder  (such as the  Fund) of a zero  coupon security accrue  a
portion  of the discount at which the security was purchased as income each year
even though  the Fund  receives no  interest payments  in cash  on the  security
during the year.

CORPORATE  FIXED-INCOME SECURITIES.   In  order to  generate the  current income
needed to achieve its  investment objective, the Fund  may invest in  investment
grade nonconvertible fixed-income securities as well as in such securities which
are  in the lower rating categories of S &  P and Moody's or which are not rated
by such agencies. Such investments may be deemed speculative in nature.

    The ratings of fixed-income securities by Moody's and S & P are a  generally
accepted  barometer of credit  risk. The Investment  Manager will primarily rely
upon such  ratings in  assessing  the creditworthiness  of  the issuers  of  the
securities it purchases. Nevertheless, the Investment Manager takes into account
in  its security  selection process  the fact  that credit  ratings evaluate the
safety of a  security's continuing  payments of principal  and interest,  rather
than  the  risk of  decline  in its  market  value. Moreover,  as  credit rating
agencies may fail  to make  timely changes in  their credit  ratings to  reflect
changing  circumstances  and events,  the  Investment Manager  will continuously
monitor the issuers of the lower-rated  securities held in the Fund's  portfolio
to determine whether these issuers have sufficient cash flow and profits to meet
required principal and interest payments.

    All  fixed-income securities are  subject to two types  of risks: the credit
risk and the interest rate risk. The credit

6
<PAGE>
risk relates to the ability of the issuer to meet interest or principal payments
or both as they come due. The  interest rate risk refers to the fluctuations  in
net  asset value of any portfolio  of fixed-income securities resulting from the
inverse relationship between  price and yield  of fixed-income securities;  that
is,  when the general level  of interest rates rises,  the prices of outstanding
fixed-income securities decline, and when interest rates fall, prices rise.

FOREIGN SECURITIES.   The Fund may  invest in securities  of foreign  companies.
However,  the Fund  will not  invest more  than 10%  of the  value of  its total
assets, at the time of purchase, in foreign securities (other than securities of
Canadian issuers  registered  under  the  Securities Exchange  Act  of  1934  or
American  Depository  Receipts,  on  which  there  is  no  such  limit). Foreign
securities investments may be affected by changes in currency rates or  exchange
control  regulations,  changes  in governmental  administration  or  economic or
monetary policy (in the  United States and abroad)  or changed circumstances  in
dealings  between nations. Costs will be incurred in connection with conversions
between various currencies held by  the Fund. Investments in foreign  securities
will also occasion risks relating to political and economic developments abroad,
including   the   possibility  of   expropriations  or   confiscatory  taxation,
limitations on the use  or transfer of  Fund assets and  any effects of  foreign
social, economic or political instability.

WHEN-ISSUED  AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES AND FORWARD COMMITMENTS.  From time
to time, in the ordinary course of business, the Fund may purchase securities on
a when-issued or delayed delivery basis or may purchase or sell securities on  a
forward  commitment basis. When  such transactions are  negotiated, the price is
fixed at the time of the commitment,  but delivery and payment can take place  a
month  or  more after  the  date of  the commitment.  While  the Fund  will only
purchase securities on  a when-issued,  delayed delivery  or forward  commitment
basis  with the  intention of  acquiring the securities,  the Fund  may sell the
securities before the settlement date, if it is deemed advisable. The securities
so purchased or sold are subject  to market fluctuation and no interest  accrues
to the purchaser during this period.

WHEN, AS AND IF ISSUED SECURITIES.  The Fund may purchase securities on a "when,
as  and if issued" basis  under which the issuance  of the security depends upon
the occurrence of a  subsequent event, such as  approval of a merger,  corporate
reorganization  or debt restructuring.  If the anticipated  event does not occur
and the  securities  are not  issued,  the Fund  will  have lost  an  investment
opportunity.  There is no overall  limit on the percentage  of the Fund's assets
which may be  committed to  the purchase  of securities on  a "when,  as and  if
issued"  basis. An increase in the percentage  of the Fund's assets committed to
the purchase of securities on a "when, as and if issued" basis may increase  the
volatility of its net asset value.

PRIVATE  PLACEMENTS.   The  Fund may  invest up  to  5% of  its total  assets in
securities which are  subject to restrictions  on resale because  they have  not
been  registered under the  Securities Act of 1933,  as amended (the "Securities
Act"), or which are otherwise  not readily marketable. (Securities eligible  for
resale  pursuant to  Rule 144A  under the Securities  Act, and  determined to be
liquid pursuant to the procedures discussed in the following paragraph, are  not
subject  to the foregoing restriction.)  These securities are generally referred
to as private placements or restricted securities. Limitations on the resale  of
such  securities  may have  an adverse  effect on  their marketability,  and may
prevent the Fund from disposing of them promptly at reasonable prices. The  Fund
may  have to bear the expense of  registering such securities for resale and the
risk of substantial delays in effecting such registration.

    The Securities  and Exchange  Commission  has adopted  Rule 144A  under  the
Securities  Act,  which  permits  the  Fund  to  sell  restricted  securities to
qualified institutional  buyers  without  limitation.  The  Investment  Manager,
pursuant  to  procedures  adopted by  the  Trustees  of the  Fund,  will  make a
determination as to the liquidity of  each restricted security purchased by  the
Fund.  If a restricted security is determined to be "liquid", such security will
not be included within the  category "illiquid securities", which under  current
policy may not exceed 15% of the Fund's net assets.

INVESTMENT IN REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUSTS.  The Fund may invest in real estate
investment  trusts,  which pool  investors' funds  for investments  primarily in
commercial real estate properties. Investment  in real estate investment  trusts
may  be the most  practical available means for  the Fund to  invest in the real
estate industry (the Fund is prohibited from investing in real estate directly).
As a shareholder  in a real  estate investment  trust, the Fund  would bear  its
ratable  share of  the real  estate investment  trust's expenses,  including its
advisory and administration fees.  At the same time  the Fund would continue  to
pay  its own investment management fees and other expenses, as a result of which
the Fund and its  shareholders in effect will  be absorbing duplicate levels  of
fees with respect to investments in real estate investment trusts.

RIGHTS  AND WARRANTS.   The  Fund may acquire  rights and/or  warrants which are
attached to  other  securities  in its  portfolio,  or  which are  issued  as  a
distribution  by the issuer of  a security held in  its portfolio. Rights and/or
warrants are, in  effect, options to  purchase equity securities  at a  specific
price, generally valid for a specific period of time, and have no voting rights,
pay  no dividends  and have  no rights with  respect to  the corporation issuing
them.

REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS.  The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements, which may
be viewed as a type of secured lending by the Fund, and which typically  involve
the  acquisition by the Fund of government securities or other securities from a
selling financial institution such as a

                                                                               7
<PAGE>
bank, savings and loan association or broker-dealer. The agreement provides that
the Fund  will sell  back to  the  institution, and  that the  institution  will
repurchase,  the underlying security at a specified price and at a fixed time in
the future, usually not more  than seven days from  the date of purchase.  While
repurchase   agreements  involve  certain  risks   not  associated  with  direct
investments in debt securities, including the risks of default or bankruptcy  of
the  selling financial institution, the Fund follows procedures to minimize such
risks. These  procedures include  effecting  repurchase transactions  only  with
large,   well-capitalized  and   well-established  financial   institutions  and
maintaining adequate collateralization.

LOWER-RATED SECURITIES.  Because of the special nature of the Fund's investments
in lower rated securities (certain lower rated securities in which the Fund  may
invest  are  commonly known  as junk  bonds), the  Investment Manager  must take
account of certain special considerations in assessing the risks associated with
such  investments.  For  example,  as  the  lower  rated  securities  market  is
relatively  new, its growth had paralleled  a long economic expansion and, until
recently, it had not faced adverse economic and market conditions. Therefore, an
economic downturn or  increase in interest  rates is likely  to have a  negative
effect on this market and on the value of the lower rated securities held by the
Fund,  as well as on  the ability of the  securities' issuers to repay principal
and interest on their borrowings.

    The prices of lower rated securities have been found to be less sensitive to
changes in  prevailing interest  rates than  higher rated  investments, but  are
likely  to be more sensitive to adverse economic changes or individual corporate
developments. During  an  economic  downturn or  substantial  period  of  rising
interest  rates, highly leveraged issuers  may experience financial stress which
would adversely effect  their ability  to service their  principal and  interest
payment  obligations,  to  meet  their projected  business  goals  or  to obtain
additional financing. If the issuer of a fixed-income security owned by the Fund
defaults, the Fund may incur additional expenses to seek recovery. In  addition,
periods  of economic  uncertainty and  change can  be expected  to result  in an
increased  volatility  of  market  prices  of  lower  rated  securities  and   a
concomitant  volatility in the net asset value of a share of the Fund. Moreover,
the market  prices of  certain  of the  Fund's  portfolio securities  which  are
structured  as  zero coupon  and payment-in-kind  securities  are affected  to a
greater extent by  interest rate changes  and thereby tend  to be more  volatile
than  securities which  pay interest periodically  and in  cash (see "Dividends,
Distributions  and  Taxes"  for  a  discussion  of  the  tax  ramifications   of
investments in such securities).

    The  secondary market for lower rated securities may be less liquid than the
markets for higher quality securities and,  as such, may have an adverse  affect
on  the market prices of certain securities. The limited liquidity of the market
may also adversely affect the ability of the Fund's Trustees to arrive at a fair
value for certain  lower rated securities  at certain times  and should make  it
difficult  for the Fund  to sell certain  securities. In addition,  new laws and
proposed new laws  may have  an adverse  effect upon  the value  of lower  rated
securities and a concomitant negative impact upon the net asset value of a share
of the Fund.

    During the fiscal year ended September 30, 1995, the monthly dollar weighted
average  ratings  of the  debt  obligations held  by  the Fund,  expressed  as a
percentage of the Fund's total investments, were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 PERCENTAGE OF
RATINGS                                        TOTAL INVESTMENTS
- --------------------------------------------  --------------------
<S>                                           <C>
AAA/Aaa.....................................            10.7%
AA/Aa.......................................             1.2%
A/A.........................................             1.8%
BBB/Baa.....................................            11.2%
BB/Ba.......................................            12.6%
B/B.........................................            35.9%
CCC/Caa.....................................             3.5%
CC/Ca.......................................             0.0%
C/C.........................................             1.3%
Unrated.....................................            21.8%
</TABLE>

OPTIONS AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS.  The Fund is permitted to enter into call  and
put  options on U.S. Treasury notes, bonds and bills and equity securities which
are listed on Exchanges and  are written in over-the-counter transactions  ("OTC
options").  Listed options are  issued by the  Options Clearing Corporation. OTC
options  are  purchased  from  or   sold  (written)  to  dealers  or   financial
institutions  which have entered into direct  agreements with the Fund. The Fund
is permitted to write covered call options on portfolio securities, in an amount
not exceeding 20%  of the  value of  its total  assets, in  order to  aid it  in
achieving its investment objective.

    The  Fund  may purchase  listed  and OTC  call  and put  options  in amounts
equalling up to 5% of its total assets. The Fund may purchase call options  only
in order to close out a covered call position. The Fund may purchase put options
on securities which it holds (or has the right to acquire) in its portfolio only
to  protect itself against a decline in the  value of the security. The Fund may
also purchase put options to close out written put positions. There are no other
limits on the Fund's ability to purchase call and put options.

    The Fund  may  purchase  and  sell  financial  futures  contracts  ("futures
contracts")  that  are traded  on U.S.  commodity  exchanges on  such underlying
securities as U.S.  Treasury bonds,  notes, and bills.  The Fund  may invest  in
financial  futures contracts only  as a hedge  against anticipated interest rate
changes.

    The Fund  may  also purchase  and  write call  and  put options  on  futures
contracts  which are traded  on an Exchange and  enter into closing transactions
with respect to such  options to terminate an  existing position. The Fund  will
purchase  and write options on futures contracts for identical purposes to those
set forth above for the purchase

8
<PAGE>
of a futures contract and the sale of a futures contract or to close out a  long
or short position in futures contracts.

    The  Fund may not  enter into futures contracts  or purchase related options
thereon if, immediately thereafter, the amount committed to initial margin  plus
the  amount paid for premiums for unexpired options on futures contracts exceeds
5% of the value of the Fund's total assets, after taking into account unrealized
gains and unrealized  losses on such  contracts it has  entered into,  provided,
however,  that in the case of an option that is in-the-money (the exercise price
of the call (put) option is less (more) than the market price of the  underlying
security)  at the time of  purchase, the in-the-money amount  may be excluded in
calculating the 5%. Moreover, the Fund may only buy and write options which  are
listed  on national securities exchanges  and may not purchase  options if, as a
result, the aggregate cost of all outstanding options exceeds 10% of the  Fund's
total  assets. In addition, the Fund may  not purchase or sell futures contracts
or related options thereon  if, immediately thereafter,  more than one-third  of
its net assets would be hedged.

RISKS  OF OPTIONS AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS.  The Fund may close out its position
as writer of an option, or as a buyer or seller of a futures contract only if  a
liquid  secondary market exists for options or futures contracts of that series.
There is no assurance that such a market will exist particularly in the case  of
OTC  options, as such options generally will only be closed out by entering into
a closing purchase transaction with  the purchasing dealer. Also, exchanges  may
limit  the amount by which  the price of many futures  contracts may move on any
day. If the price moves  equal the daily limit on  successive days, then it  may
prove  impossible to  liquidate a futures  position until the  daily limit moves
have ceased.

    While the futures contracts and options transactions to be engaged in by the
Fund for  the  purpose  of  hedging the  Fund's  portfolio  securities  are  not
speculative  in nature, there are risks inherent in the use of such instruments.
One such  risk  is  that  the  Investment Manager  could  be  incorrect  in  its
expectations  as to the  direction or extent  of various interest  rate or price
movements or the time span within  which the movements take place. For  example,
if the Fund sold futures contracts for the sale of securities in anticipation of
an  increase  in interest  rates,  and then  interest  rates went  down instead,
causing bond prices to rise, the Fund would lose money on the sale. Another risk
which may arise  in employing  futures contracts  to protect  against the  price
volatility  of portfolio securities is that the prices of securities and indices
subject to  futures contracts  (and  thereby the  futures contract  prices)  may
correlate  imperfectly  with  the behavior  of  the  cash prices  of  the Fund's
portfolio securities. See  the Statement of  Additional Information for  further
discussion of such risks.

PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT

The  Fund's portfolio is actively managed by  its Investment Manager with a view
to achieving the Fund's investment objective. In determining which securities to
purchase for the Fund  or hold in the  Fund's portfolio, the Investment  Manager
will  rely  on  information  from various  sources,  including  rating agencies,
research, analysis and appraisals of brokers and dealers, including Dean  Witter
Reynolds  Inc. ("DWR"), a broker-dealer affiliate  of InterCapital, the views of
Trustees of the  Fund and  others regarding economic  developments and  interest
rate  trends,  and the  Investment Manager's  own analysis  of factors  it deems
relevant. The Fund is managed within InterCapital's Growth Group, which  manages
twenty-six  funds and fund portfolios with  approximately $8.8 billion in assets
at December 31, 1995. Michael G. Knox, Senior Portfolio Manager of InterCapital,
and a member  of InterCapital's  Growth Group,  has been  the primary  portfolio
manager of the Fund since November, 1994 and has been the sole portfolio manager
of  the  Fund  since  December,  1995. Mr.  Knox  has  been  managing portfolios
comprised of growth  and other  securities at InterCapital  since August,  1993;
prior  thereto  he  was  a  portfolio  manager  and  analyst  with  Eagle  Asset
Management, Inc.  (February,  1991-August,  1993)  and  an  assistant  portfolio
manager  and analyst with Heritage  Asset Management, Inc. (July, 1988-February,
1991).

    Orders for transactions in portfolio securities are placed for the Fund with
a number of  brokers and dealers,  including DWR.  Pursuant to an  order of  the
Securities  and Exchange Commission, the  Fund may effect principal transactions
in certain money market  instruments with DWR. In  addition, the Fund may  incur
brokerage commissions on transactions conducted through DWR.

    The  portfolio trading engaged  in by the  Fund may result  in its portfolio
turnover rate exceeding 100%. The Fund  is expected to incur higher than  normal
brokerage  commission costs due to its portfolio turnover rate. Short-term gains
and losses  taxable at  ordinary income  rates may  result from  such  portfolio
transactions.  See "Dividends, Distributions and Taxes" for a full discussion of
the tax implications of the Fund's  trading policy. A more extensive  discussion
of  the Fund's  portfolio brokerage  policies is set  forth in  the Statement of
Additional Information.

    Except as  specifically  noted,  all  investment  objectives,  policies  and
practices discussed above are not fundamental policies of the Fund and, as such,
may be changed without shareholder approval.

                                                                               9
<PAGE>
INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The  investment restrictions listed  below are among  the restrictions that have
been adopted by the Fund as  fundamental policies. Under the Investment  Company
Act  of 1940, as  amended (the "Act"),  a fundamental policy  may not be changed
without the vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund,
as defined in the Act.

    The Fund may not:

        1. Invest  more  than  5% of  the  value  of its  total  assets  in  the
    securities of any one issuer (other than obligations issued or guaranteed by
    the United States Government, its agencies or instrumentalities).

        2.  Purchase more than  10% of all outstanding  voting securities or any
    class of securities of any one issuer. For purposes of compliance with  this
    restriction,  the Fund will not invest  in the convertible securities of any
    one issuer if, upon conversion of such securities, the Fund would hold  more
    than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of that issuer.

        3.  Invest more than 25% of the  value of its total assets in securities
    of issuers  in  any  one  industry.  This  restriction  does  not  apply  to
    obligations  issued or  guaranteed by  the United  States Government  or its
    agencies or instrumentalities.

        4. Invest more than 5% of the value of its total assets in securities of
    issuers having  a record,  together with  predecessors, of  less than  three
    years  of  continuous operation.  This restriction  shall  not apply  to any
    obligation   of   the   United   States   Government,   its   agencies    or
    instrumentalities.

        5.  Borrow  money, except  that  the Fund  may  borrow from  a  bank for
    temporary or emergency purposes  in amounts not exceeding  5% (taken at  the
    lower  of  cost or  current value)  of the  value of  its total  assets (not
    including the amount borrowed).

        6. Invest more than  5% of the  value of its  total assets in  warrants,
    including  not more than 2% of such  assets in warrants not listed on either
    the New  York  or  American  Stock Exchange.  However,  the  acquisition  of
    warrants attached to other securities is not subject to this restriction.

    If a percentage restriction is adhered to at the time of investment, a later
increase  or  decrease  in  percentage  resulting from  a  change  in  values of
portfolio securities or amount of total or  net assets will not be considered  a
violation of any of the foregoing restrictions.

PURCHASE OF FUND SHARES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The  Fund  offers its  shares  for sale  to the  public  on a  continuous basis.
Pursuant  to  a  Distribution  Agreement  between  the  Fund  and  Dean   Witter
Distributors  Inc. (the "Distributor"), an  affiliate of the Investment Manager,
shares of the Fund  are distributed by  the Distributor and  offered by DWR  and
other  dealers  who  have  entered  into  selected  dealer  agreements  with the
Distributor ("Selected Broker-Dealers"). The  principal executive office of  the
Distributor is located at Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048.

    The minimum initial purchase is $1,000. Subsequent purchases of $100 or more
may  be made by sending  a check, payable to  Dean Witter Convertible Securities
Trust, directly to Dean Witter Trust Company (the "Transfer Agent") at P.O.  Box
1040,  Jersey  City,  NJ  07303  or  by  contacting  a  DWR  or  other  Selected
Broker-Dealer account executive.  The minimum  initial purchase in  the case  of
investments  through EasyInvest,  an automatic  purchase plan  (see "Shareholder
Services"), is $100, provided  that the schedule  of automatic investments  will
result  in investments totalling at least $1,000 within the first twelve months.
In the  case  of investments  pursuant  to Systematic  Payroll  Deduction  Plans
(including Individual Retirement Plans), the Fund, in its discretion, may accept
investments  without  regard to  any minimum  amounts  which would  otherwise be
required if the  Fund has  reason to  believe that  additional investments  will
increase  the investment in  all accounts under  such Plans to  at least $1,000.
Certificates for shares purchased will not be issued unless a request is made by
the shareholder in writing to the Transfer Agent. The offering price will be the
net asset value  per share next  determined following receipt  of an order  (see
"Determination of Net Asset Value").

    Shares  of  the Fund  are sold  through  the Distributor  on a  normal three
business day settlement basis; that is, payment is due on the third business day
(settlement date) after the order is placed with the Distributor. Since DWR  and
other  Selected Broker-Dealers forward investors' funds on settlement date, they
will benefit  from the  temporary use  of the  funds if  payment is  made  prior
thereto.  As noted above, orders placed directly with the Transfer Agent must be
accompanied by  payment. Investors  will be  entitled to  receive dividends  and
capital  gains distributions if their order is received by the close of business
on the day  prior to  the record  date for  such distributions.  While no  sales
charge  is imposed at the time shares are purchased, a contingent deferred sales
charge  may  be  imposed  at  the  time  of  redemption  (see  "Redemptions  and
Repurchases"). Sales personnel are compensated for selling shares of the Fund at
the  time of  their sale  by the  Distributor and/or  Selected Broker-Dealer. In
addition, some  sales  personnel  of the  Selected  Broker-Dealer  will  receive
various  types of non-cash  compensation as special  sales incentives, including
trips, educational and/or business seminars and
mer-

10
<PAGE>
chandise. The Fund and the Distributor reserve the right to reject any  purchase
orders.

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

The Fund has adopted a Plan of Distribution pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Act
(the  "Plan"), under which the Fund pays the Distributor a fee, which is accrued
daily and payable monthly,  at an annual rate  of 1% of the  lesser of: (a)  the
average  daily aggregate gross sales of the Fund's shares since the inception of
the  Fund  (not   including  reinvestments   of  dividends   or  capital   gains
distributions),  less the average daily aggregate  net asset value of the Fund's
shares redeemed  since the  Fund's inception  upon which  a contingent  deferred
sales  charge has been  imposed or waived,  or (b) the  Fund's average daily net
assets. This fee is treated by the Fund as an expense in the year it is accrued.
A portion of the fee payable pursuant to the Plan, equal to 0.25% of the  Fund's
average  daily net assets, is characterized as  a service fee within the meaning
of NASD  guidelines. The  service fee  is a  payment made  for personal  service
and/or maintenance of shareholder accounts.

    Amounts paid under the Plan are paid to the Distributor to compensate it for
the  services provided and the  expenses borne by the  Distributor and others in
the distribution of the Fund's shares, including the payment of commissions  for
sales  of the Fund's  shares and incentive  compensation to and  expenses of DWR
account executives and others who engage  in or support distributions of  shares
or  who service shareholder accounts, including overhead and telephone expenses;
printing and distribution of  prospectuses and reports  used in connection  with
the  offering  of the  Fund's  shares to  other  than current  shareholders; and
preparation, printing  and  distribution  of sales  literature  and  advertising
materials.  In addition, the  Distributor may utilize fees  paid pursuant to the
Plan to compensate DWR and  other Selected Broker-Dealers for their  opportunity
costs  in advancing such amounts,  which compensation would be  in the form of a
carrying charge on any unreimbursed distribution expenses.

    For the fiscal  year ended  September 30,  1995, the  Fund accrued  payments
under  the Plan amounting  to $1,790,824, which  amount is equal  to 1.0% of the
Fund's average daily net assets for the fiscal year. The payments accrued  under
the  Plan were  calculated pursuant  to clause  (b) of  the compensation formula
under the Plan.

    At any given time, the expenses of distributing shares of the Fund may be in
excess of the total of (i) the payments  made by the Fund pursuant to the  Plan,
and  (ii) the  proceeds of contingent  deferred sales charges  paid by investors
upon the  redemption of  shares  (see "Redemptions  and  Repurchases--Contingent
Deferred  Sales Charge"). For example, if $1 million in expenses in distributing
shares of the Fund had been incurred and $750,000 had been received as described
in (i)  and  (ii)  above, the  excess  expense  would amount  to  $250,000.  The
Distributor has advised the Fund that such excess amounts including the carrying
charge  described above, totalled  $66,744,351 at September  30, 1995, which was
equal to  36% of  the  Fund's net  assets  on such  date.  Because there  is  no
requirement   under  the  Plan  that  the  Distributor  be  reimbursed  for  all
distribution expenses or any requirement that the Plan be continued from year to
year, this excess amount does not  constitute a liability of the Fund.  Although
there  is no legal obligation for the Fund to pay expenses incurred in excess of
payments made to the Distributor under  the Plan and the proceeds of  contingent
deferred  sales charges paid by investors upon  redemption of shares, if for any
reason the  Plan is  terminated, the  Trustees will  consider at  that time  the
manner  in which to  treat such expenses. Any  cumulative expenses incurred, but
not yet  recovered  through  distribution  fees  or  contingent  deferred  sales
charges,  may  or  may not  be  recovered  through future  distribution  fees or
contingent deferred sales charges.

DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

The net asset value per share of the Fund is determined once daily at 4:00 p.m.,
New York time, on each day that the New York Stock Exchange is open, or, on days
when the New  York Stock Exchange  closes prior  to 4:00 p.m.,  at such  earlier
time,  by  taking  the  value  of  all  assets  of  the  Fund,  subtracting  its
liabilities, dividing by the number of  shares outstanding and adjusting to  the
nearest  cent. The  net asset  value per  share will  not be  determined on Good
Friday and on such other federal and non-federal holidays as are observed by the
New York Stock Exchange.

    In the calculation of  the Fund's net asset  value: (1) an equity  portfolio
security  listed or traded on the New  York or American Stock Exchange or quoted
by NASDAQ is  valued at  its latest  sale price  on that  exchange or  quotation
service  prior to the time  assets are valued; if there  were no sales that day,
the security is valued  at the latest  bid price (in cases  where a security  is
traded  on  more than  one  exchange, the  security  is valued  on  the exchange
designated  as  the  primary  market  pursuant  to  procedures  adopted  by  the
Trustees),  and (2)  all other  portfolio securities  for which over-the-counter
market quotations are readily available are valued at the latest bid price. When
market quotations are  not readily available,  or when it  is determined by  the
Investment  Manager that sale or  bid prices are not  reflective of a security's
fair value, portfolio securities are valued at their fair value as determined in
good faith under procedures established by and under the general supervision  of
the Fund's Trustees.

    Short-term  debt securities with remaining maturities  of sixty days or less
at the  time of  purchase are  valued  at amortized  cost, unless  the  Trustees
determine  such does  not reflect  the securities'  market value,  in which case
these securities  will  be valued  at  their fair  value  as determined  by  the
Trustees.

    Certain  of  the Fund's  portfolio securities  may be  valued by  an outside
pricing service approved by the Fund's Trustees. The pricing service utilizes  a
matrix system

                                                                              11
<PAGE>
incorporating  security  quality, maturity  and coupon  as the  evaluation model
parameters, and/or  research  evaluations  by its  staff,  including  review  of
broker-dealer  market price  quotations in determining  what it  believes is the
fair valuation of the portfolio securities valued by such pricing service.

SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND  DISTRIBUTIONS.  All income dividends  and
capital gains distributions are automatically paid in full and fractional shares
of  the Fund (or, if specified by the shareholder, any other open-end investment
company for which InterCapital serves as investment manager (collectively,  with
the  Fund, the "Dean Witter Funds")),  unless the shareholder requests that they
be paid in  cash. Shares  so acquired  are not subject  to the  imposition of  a
contingent  deferred sales  charge upon  their redemption  (see "Redemptions and
Repurchases").

EASYINVESTSM.  Shareholders may subscribe  to EasyInvest, an automatic  purchase
plan  which  provides for  any  amount from  $100  to $5,000  to  be transferred
automatically from a checking or savings account, on a semi-monthly, monthly  or
quarterly basis, to the Transfer Agent for investment in shares of the Fund (see
"Purchase   of  Fund  Shares"   and  "Redemptions  and  Repurchases--Involuntary
Redemption").

SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL  PLAN.   A  systematic  withdrawal plan  (the  "Withdrawal
Plan")  is available  for shareholders  who own or  purchase shares  of the Fund
having a minimum value of $10,000 based  upon the then current net asset  value.
The  Withdrawal Plan provides  for monthly or  quarterly (March, June, September
and December) checks in any  dollar amount, not less than  $25, or in any  whole
percentage  of  the  account balance,  on  an annualized  basis.  Any applicable
contingent deferred sales charge  will be imposed on  shares redeemed under  the
Withdrawal  Plan  (see "Redemptions  and Repurchases--Contingent  Deferred Sales
Charge"). Therefore, any shareholder participating  in the Withdrawal Plan  will
have  sufficient shares redeemed  from his or  her account so  that the proceeds
(net of any applicable contingent deferred sales charge) to the shareholder will
be the designated monthly or quarterly amount.

    Shareholders should  contact  their  DWR  or  other  Selected  Broker-Dealer
account executive or the Transfer Agent for further information about any of the
above services.

INVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED IN CASH.  Any shareholder who
receives  a cash payment  representing a dividend  or capital gains distribution
may invest such dividend or distribution at  the net asset value per share  next
determined  after receipt by the  Transfer Agent, by returning  the check or the
proceeds to the Transfer Agent within thirty days after the payment date. Shares
so acquired are  not subject to  the imposition of  a contingent deferred  sales
charge upon their redemption (see "Redemptions and Repurchases.")

TAX-SHELTERED  RETIREMENT  PLANS.   Retirement plans  are available  through the
Distributor for use  by corporations, the  self-employed, Individual  Retirement
Accounts  and Custodial Accounts under Section 403(b)(7) of the Internal Revenue
Code. Adoption  of such  plans  should be  on advice  of  legal counsel  or  tax
adviser.

    For  further information  regarding plan administration,  custodial fees and
other  details,  investors   should  contact   their  DWR   or  other   Selected
Broker-Dealer account executive or the Transfer Agent.

EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE

The  Fund makes available  to its shareholders  an "Exchange Privilege" allowing
the exchange of shares of  the Fund for shares of  other Dean Witter Funds  sold
with  a contingent deferred sales charge ("CDSC  funds"), and for shares of Dean
Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust, Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust,
Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund, Dean Witter Balanced Growth Fund, Dean  Witter
Balanced  Income Fund and Dean Witter  Intermediate Term U.S. Treasury Trust and
five Dean Witter Funds which are  money market funds (the foregoing eleven  non-
CDSC  funds are hereinafter referred to  as the "Exchange Funds"). Exchanges may
be made after the shares  of the Fund acquired by  purchase (not by exchange  or
dividend  reinvestment)  have been  held for  thirty days.  There is  no waiting
period for exchanges of shares acquired by exchange or dividend reinvestment.

    An exchange to another CDSC  fund or any Exchange Fund  that is not a  money
market  fund is on the basis of the next calculated net asset value per share of
each fund after  the exchange order  is received. When  exchanging into a  money
market  fund from the Fund, shares  of the Fund are redeemed  out of the Fund at
their next calculated  net asset value  and the proceeds  of the redemption  are
used  to  purchase  shares of  the  money market  fund  at the  net  asset value
determined the following business day.  Subsequent exchanges between any of  the
money  market funds and any of the CDSC funds can be effected on the same basis.
No contingent  deferred sales  charge ("CDSC")  is imposed  at the  time of  any
exchange, although any applicable CDSC will be imposed upon ultimate redemption.
Shares of the Fund acquired in exchange for shares of another CDSC fund having a
different  CDSC schedule  than that  of this  Fund will  be subject  to the CDSC
schedule of this  Fund, even if  such shares are  subsequently re-exchanged  for
shares  of the  CDSC fund  originally purchased. During  the period  of time the
shareholder remains in the  Exchange Fund (calculated from  the last day of  the
month in which the Exchange Fund

12
<PAGE>
shares  were acquired), the  holding period (for the  purpose of determining the
rate of the CDSC)  is frozen. If those  shares are subsequently reexchanged  for
shares  of a  CDSC fund,  the holding  period previously  frozen when  the first
exchange was made resumes on the last day of the month in which shares of a CDSC
fund are  reacquired. Thus,  the CDSC  is  based upon  the time  (calculated  as
described  above) the shareholder was invested  in a CDSC fund (see "Redemptions
and Repurchases--Contingent Deferred  Sales Charge."). However,  in the case  of
shares  exchanged  into an  Exchange Fund  on or  after April  23, 1990,  upon a
redemption of shares which  results in a  CDSC being imposed,  a credit (not  to
exceed  the amount of the CDSC) will be given in an amount equal to the Exchange
Fund  12b-1  distribution  fees  incurred  on  or  after  that  date  which  are
attributable  to those shares.  (Exchange Fund 12b-1  distribution fees, if any,
are described in the prospectuses for those funds.)

    In addition, shares of the  Fund may be acquired  in exchange for shares  of
Dean  Witter Funds sold  with a front-end sales  charge ("front-end sales charge
funds"), but shares  of the  Fund, however acquired,  may not  be exchanged  for
shares  of  front-end sales  charge funds.  Shares  of a  CDSC fund  acquired in
exchange for shares of a front-end sales charge fund (or in exchange for  shares
of  other Dean Witter  Funds for which  shares of a  front-end sales charge fund
have been exchanged) are not subject to any CDSC upon their redemption.

    Purchases and  exchanges should  be  made for  investment purposes  only.  A
pattern  of frequent  exchanges may  be deemed by  the Investment  Manager to be
abusive and contrary to the best interests of the Fund's other shareholders and,
at the Investment Manager's discretion, may be limited by the Fund's refusal  to
accept  additional purchases  and/or exchanges  from the  investor. Although the
Fund does not  have any  specific definition of  what constitutes  a pattern  of
frequent  exchanges,  and  will  consider all  relevant  factors  in determining
whether a particular situation is abusive and contrary to the best interests  of
the Fund and its other shareholders, investors should be aware that the Fund and
each  of the other Dean Witter Funds  may in their discretion limit or otherwise
restrict the number  of times this  Exchange Privilege may  be exercised by  any
investor.  Any such restriction will be made  by the Fund on a prospective basis
only, upon notice  to the  shareholder not later  than ten  days following  such
shareholder's   most  recent  exchange.  Also  the  Exchange  Privilege  may  be
terminated or revised at  any time by  the Fund and/or any  of such Dean  Witter
Funds  for which shares of the Fund have been exchanged, upon such notice as may
be required by applicable  regulatory agencies. Shareholders maintaining  margin
accounts  with  DWR  or another  Selected  Broker-Dealer are  referred  to their
account executive  regarding restrictions  on  exchange of  shares of  the  Fund
pledged in the margin account.

    The  current prospectus for each  fund describes its investment objective(s)
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. An exchange will be treated  for
federal income tax purposes the same as a repurchase or 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 ninety days after the shares are purchased.  The
Exchange  Privilege is only available in states where an exchange may legally be
made.

    If DWR or other Selected Broker-Dealer  is the current dealer of record  and
its  account  numbers  are part  of  the account  information,  shareholders may
initiate an exchange of shares of the Fund for shares of any of the Dean  Witter
Funds  (for which the Exchange Privilege is available) pursuant to this Exchange
Privilege  by  contacting  their   account  executive  (no  Exchange   Privilege
Authorization  Form is required). Other shareholders (and those shareholders who
are clients  of DWR  or another  Selected  Broker-Dealer but  who wish  to  make
exchanges  directly by writing or telephoning  the Transfer Agent) must complete
and forward  to the  Transfer Agent  an Exchange  Privilege Authorization  Form,
copies  of  which  may be  obtained  from  the Transfer  Agent,  to  initiate an
exchange. If the Authorization Form is used, exchanges may be made in writing or
by contacting the Transfer  Agent at (800) 869-NEWS  (toll-free). The Fund  will
employ  reasonable procedures to confirm that exchange instructions communicated
over the telephone are  genuine. Such procedures  may include requiring  various
forms  of personal identification such as name, mailing address, social security
or other  tax identification  number  and DWR  or other  Selected  Broker-Dealer
account  number (if any).  Telephone instructions may also  be recorded. If such
procedures are  not employed,  the Fund  may be  liable for  any losses  due  to
unauthorized or fraudulent instructions.

    Telephone exchange instructions will be accepted if received by the Transfer
Agent  between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00  p.m., New York time, on  any day the New York
Stock Exchange is  open. Any  shareholder wishing to  make an  exchange who  has
previously  filed an Exchange Privilege Authorization  Form and who is unable to
reach the Fund by telephone  should contact his or  her DWR or another  Selected
Broker-Dealer  account  executive, if  appropriate, or  make a  written exchange
request. Shareholders are  advised that  during periods of  drastic economic  or
market  changes, it  is possible that  the telephone exchange  procedures may be
difficult to implement, although this has not been the case with the Dean Witter
Funds in the past.

    Shareholders should  contact  their  DWR  or  other  Selected  Broker-Dealer
account  executive  or  the Transfer  Agent  for further  information  about the
Exchange Privilege.

                                                                              13
<PAGE>
REDEMPTIONS AND REPURCHASES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

REDEMPTION.  Shares of the Fund can be redeemed for cash at any time at the  net
asset value per share next determined; however, such redemption proceeds will be
reduced  by the amount of any  applicable contingent deferred sales charges (see
below).  If  shares  are  held  in  a  shareholder's  account  without  a  share
certificate,  a written request for redemption sent to the Fund's Transfer Agent
at P.O. Box 983, Jersey City, NJ 07303 is required. If certificates are held  by
the   shareholder(s),   the  shares   may  be   redeemed  by   surrendering  the
certificate(s) with a written request for redemption, along with any  additional
information required by the Transfer Agent.

CONTINGENT  DEFERRED SALES CHARGE.   Shares of  the Fund which  are held for six
years or more after purchase (calculated from the last day of the month in which
the shares were purchased)  will not be subject  to any charge upon  redemption.
Shares redeemed sooner than six years after purchase may, however, be subject to
a  charge upon  redemption. This charge  is called a  "contingent deferred sales
charge" ("CDSC"), which  will be  a percentage of  the dollar  amount of  shares
redeemed  and will be assessed  on an amount equal to  the lesser of the current
market value  or  the cost  of  the shares  being  redeemed. The  size  of  this
percentage  will depend upon how long the shares have been held, as set forth in
the table below:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               CONTINGENT
                                                DEFERRED
               YEAR SINCE                     SALES CHARGE
                PURCHASE                   AS A PERCENTAGE OF
              PAYMENT MADE                  AMOUNT REDEEMED
- -----------------------------------------  ------------------
<S>                                        <C>
First....................................         5.0%
Second...................................         4.0%
Third....................................         3.0%
Fourth...................................         2.0%
Fifth....................................         2.0%
Sixth....................................         1.0%
Seventh and thereafter...................         None
</TABLE>

    A CDSC will not be imposed on:  (i) any amount which represents an  increase
in value of shares purchased within the six years preceding the redemption; (ii)
the current net asset value of shares purchased more than six years prior to the
redemption;  and (iii) the  current net asset value  of shares purchased through
reinvestment of dividends  or distributions and/or  shares acquired in  exchange
for  shares of Dean Witter Funds sold with  a front-end sales charge or of other
Dean Witter Funds acquired in exchange for such shares. Moreover, in determining
whether a CDSC is applicable it will  be assumed that amounts described in  (i),
(ii)  and (iii) above (in  that order) are redeemed  first. In addition, no CDSC
will be imposed on redemptions of shares which are attributable to  reinvestment
of  dividends or distributions from, or the proceeds of, certain Unit Investment
Trusts.

    In addition, the CDSC, if otherwise  applicable, will be waived in the  case
of:

    (1)  redemptions of shares  held at the  time a shareholder  dies or becomes
disabled, only  if the  shares are:  (A) registered  either in  the name  of  an
individual  shareholder (not a trust),  or in the names  of such shareholder and
his or her spouse as joint tenants with right of survivorship; or (B) held in  a
qualified  corporate  or  self-employed retirement  plan,  Individual Retirement
Account ("IRA") or  Custodial Account  under Section 403(b)(7)  of the  Internal
Revenue  Code ("403(b)  Custodial Account"),  provided in  either case  that the
redemption is requested within one year of the death or initial determination of
disability;

    (2)  redemptions   in  connection   with  the   following  retirement   plan
distributions: (A) lump-sum or other distributions from a qualified corporate or
self-employed  retirement plan following  retirement (or, in the  case of a "key
employee" of  a "top  heavy" plan,  following  attainment of  age 59  1/2);  (B)
distributions  from an IRA  or 403(b) Custodial  Account following attainment of
age 59 1/2; or (C) a tax-free return of an excess contribution to an IRA; and

    (3) all redemptions of  shares held for  the benefit of  a participant in  a
corporate or self-employed retirement plan qualified under Section 401(k) of the
Internal   Revenue  Code  which  offers  investment  companies  managed  by  the
Investment Manager  or its  subsidiary, Dean  Witter Services  Company Inc.,  as
self-directed  investment alternatives and for  which Dean Witter Trust Company,
an affiliate  of  the Investment  Manager,  serves as  recordkeeper  or  Trustee
("Eligible  401(k) Plan"), provided that either: (A) the plan continues to be an
Eligible 401(k)  Plan  after  the  redemption;  or  (B)  the  redemption  is  in
connection  with the complete termination of the plan involving the distribution
of all plan assets to participants.

    With reference to (1) above, for the purpose of determining disability,  the
Distributor  utilizes the definition of disability contained in Section 72(m)(7)
of the  Internal Revenue  Code, which  relates  to the  inability to  engage  in
gainful  employment. With reference  to (2) above,  the term "distribution" does
not encompass a direct transfer of  IRA, 403(b) Custodial Account or  retirement
plan  assets to a  successor custodian or  trustee. All waivers  will be granted
only following receipt by the  Distributor of confirmation of the  shareholder's
entitlement.

REPURCHASE.   DWR and other Selected Broker-Dealers are authorized to repurchase
shares represented by  a share certificate  which is delivered  to any of  their
offices.  Shares held in a shareholder's account without a share certificate may
also be repurchased by DWR and other Selected Broker-Dealers upon the telephonic
or telegraphic request of the shareholder. The repurchase price is the net asset
value next computed (see "Purchase of Fund Shares") after such repurchase  order
is  received by DWR  or other Selected Broker-Dealer,  reduced by any applicable
CDSC.

    The CDSC, if any, will be the only fee imposed upon repurchase by the  Fund,
the  Distributor, DWR  or other  Selected Broker-Dealers.  The offer  by DWR and
other

14
<PAGE>
Selected Broker-Dealers to repurchase shares may be suspended without notice  by
them  at any time. In  that event, shareholders may  redeem their shares through
the Fund's Transfer Agent as set forth above under "Redemption."

PAYMENT FOR SHARES REDEEMED  OR REPURCHASED.  Payment  for shares presented  for
repurchase  or redemption will be made by  check within seven days after receipt
by the Transfer Agent of the  certificate and/or written request in good  order.
Such payment may be postponed or the right of redemption suspended under unusual
circumstances,  e.g., when normal  trading is not  taking place on  the New York
Stock Exchange. If  the shares to  be redeemed have  recently been purchased  by
check,  payment of the redemption  proceeds may be delayed  for the minimum time
needed to verify that the check used  for investment has been honored (not  more
than  fifteen days from the time of receipt of the check by the Transfer Agent).
Shareholders  maintaining  margin   accounts  with  DWR   or  another   Selected
Broker-Dealer are referred to their account executives regarding restrictions on
redemption of shares of the Fund pledged in the margin account.

REINSTATEMENT  PRIVILEGE.  A shareholder who has  had his or her shares redeemed
or repurchased and  has not  previously exercised  this reinstatement  privilege
may,  within  thirty  days  after  the date  of  the  redemption  or repurchase,
reinstate any portion or all of the proceeds of such redemption or repurchase in
shares of the Fund at the net asset value next determined after a  reinstatement
request,  together  with the  proceeds, is  received by  the Transfer  Agent and
receive a pro-rata credit for any  CDSC paid in connection with such  redemption
or repurchase.

INVOLUNTARY  REDEMPTION.  The Fund reserves the right, on sixty days' notice, to
redeem, at their  net asset  value, the shares  of any  shareholder (other  than
shares  held  in an  Individual Retirement  Account  or Custodial  Account under
Section 403(b)(7) of  the Internal Revenue  Code) whose shares  have a value  of
less  than $100 or such lesser amount as may be fixed by the Fund's Trustees or,
in the case of an account opened through EasyInvest, if after twelve months  the
Shareholder  has invested less  than $1,000 in the  account. However, before the
Fund redeems such  shares and  sends the proceeds  to the  shareholder, it  will
notify  the shareholder that the value of the shares is less than the applicable
amount and allow him or  her sixty days to make  an additional investment in  an
amount  which will  increase the  value of his  or her  account to  at least the
applicable amount or more  before the redemption is  processed. No CDSC will  be
imposed on any involuntary redemption.

DIVIDENDS, DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS.  The Fund intends to pay quarterly income dividends
and  to distribute net short-term and net long-term gains, if any, at least once
per year. The Fund may, however, determine either to distribute or to retain all
or part of any long-term gains in any year for reinvestment.

    All dividends and  capital gains  distributions will be  paid in  additional
Fund  shares  and automatically  credited to  the shareholder's  account without
issuance of a share certificate unless the shareholder requests in writing  that
all   dividends  and/or  distributions  be   paid  in  cash.  (See  "Shareholder
Services--Automatic Investment of Dividends and Distributions".)

TAXES.  Because  the Fund  intends to distribute  substantially all  of its  net
investment  income and  net capital gains  to shareholders  and otherwise remain
qualified as a regulated investment company  under Subchapter M of the  Internal
Revenue  Code, it  is not  expected that the  Fund will  be required  to pay any
federal income  tax on  such  income and  capital  gains. Shareholders  who  are
required  to pay taxes on their income  will normally have to pay federal income
taxes, and  any state  income taxes,  on the  dividends and  distributions  they
receive  from the Fund. Such dividends and distributions, to the extent they are
derived from net investment income or net short-term capital gains, are  taxable
to  the  shareholder  as  ordinary dividend  income  regardless  of  whether the
shareholder receives such payments in additional shares or in cash.

    Gains or losses  on the  Fund's transactions in  listed non-equity  options,
futures  and options on futures  generally are treated as  60% long-term and 40%
short-term. When the Fund engages  in options and futures transactions,  various
tax  regulations applicable to the Fund may  have the effect of causing the Fund
to recognize  a gain  or loss  for  tax purposes  before that  gain or  loss  is
realized,  or  to  defer  recognition  of  a  realized  loss  for  tax purposes.
Recognition, for tax  purposes, of  an unrealized loss  may result  in a  lesser
amount of the Fund's realized gains being available for annual distribution.

    With  respect to the  Fund's investments in  zero coupon and payment-in-kind
bonds, the  Fund accrues  income prior  to  any actual  cash payments  by  their
issuers. In order to continue to comply with Subchapter M of the Code and remain
able  to forego payment of  Federal income tax on  its income and capital gains,
the Fund must  distribute all  of its  net investment  income, including  income
accrued  from zero coupon  and payment-in-kind bonds.  As such, the  Fund may be
required to dispose of  some of its  portfolio securities under  disadvantageous
circumstances to generate the cash required for distribution.

    One  of the  requirements for  the Fund to  remain qualified  as a regulated
investment company is that less than 30%  of the Fund's gross income be  derived
from  gains from the sale or other  disposition of securities held for less than
three months. Accordingly, the Fund may be restricted in the writing of  options
on securities held for less than three

                                                                              15
<PAGE>
months, in the writing of options which expire in less than three months, and in
effecting  closing transactions with  respect to call or  put options which have
been written or purchased less than three months prior to such transactions. The
Fund may also be restricted in  its ability to engage in transactions  involving
futures contracts.

    After  the  end  of  the  calendar  year,  shareholders  will  receive  full
information on their dividends and capital gains distributions for tax purposes.
To avoid  being subject  to a  31%  federal backup  withholding tax  on  taxable
dividends,  capital  gains distributions  and  the proceeds  of  redemptions and
repurchases, shareholders' taxpayer identification numbers must be furnished and
certified as to their accuracy.

    Distributions of  net  long-term  capital  gains, if  any,  are  taxable  to
shareholders as long-term capital gains regardless of how long a shareholder has
held the Fund's shares and regardless of whether the distribution is received in
additional  shares or in cash. Capital  gains distributions are not eligible for
the dividends received deduction.

    Shareholders should consult their  tax advisers as  to the applicability  of
the foregoing to their current situation.

PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

From  time to time the  Fund may quote its "yield"  and/or its "total return" in
advertisements and sales literature. Both the yield and the total return of  the
Fund  are based on historical  earnings and are not  intended to indicate future
performance. The  yield of  the Fund  is  computed by  dividing the  Fund's  net
investment  income over a 30-day  period by an average  value (using the average
number of shares entitled to receive dividends and the net asset value per share
at the  end  of  the  period), all  in  accordance  with  applicable  regulatory
requirements. Such amount is compounded for six months and then annualized for a
twelve-month period to derive the Fund's yield.

    The  "average annual total return" of the Fund refers to a figure reflecting
the average annualized  percentage increase  (or decrease)  in the  value of  an
initial  investment in the Fund of $1,000 over  one year, five and ten years, as
well as over  the life of  the Fund.  Average annual total  return reflects  all
income  earned  by the  Fund,  any appreciation  or  depreciation of  the Fund's
assets, all expenses  incurred by  the Fund and  all sales  charges incurred  by
shareholders,  for  the  stated periods.  It  also assumes  reinvestment  of all
dividends and distributions paid by the Fund.

    In addition to the foregoing, the  Fund may advertise its total return  over
different  periods of time by means of aggregate, average, year-by-year or other
types of total  return figures.  Such calculations may  or may  not reflect  the
deduction  of the  contingent deferred sales  charge which,  if reflected, would
reduce the  performance  quoted. The  Fund  may  also advertise  the  growth  of
hypothetical investments of $10,000, $50,000 and $100,000 in shares of the Fund.
The  Fund  from time  to time  may  also advertise  its performance  relative to
certain performance rankings and  indices compiled by independent  organizations
(such as mutual fund performance rankings of Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.).

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

VOTING  RIGHTS.  All shares of beneficial interest  of the Fund are of $0.01 par
value and are equal as to earnings, assets and voting privileges.

    The Fund is  not required to  hold Annual Meetings  of Shareholders and,  in
ordinary  circumstances, the  Fund does  not intend  to hold  such meetings. The
Trustees may call  Special Meetings  of Shareholders for  action by  shareholder
vote  as may be required  by the Act or the  Declaration of Trust. Under certain
circumstances the Trustees may be  removed by action of  the Trustees or by  the
Shareholders.

    Under Massachusetts law, shareholders of a business trust may, under certain
circumstances,  be held personally liable as partners for the obligations of the
Fund. However,  the  Declaration of  Trust  contains an  express  disclaimer  of
shareholder  liability for acts  or obligations of the  Fund, requires that Fund
obligations include  such  disclaimer,  and  provides  for  indemnification  and
reimbursement  of expenses out  of the Fund's property  for any shareholder held
personally liable  for  the  obligations  of  the Fund.  Thus,  the  risk  of  a
shareholder  incurring  financial loss  on account  of shareholder  liability is
limited to circumstances in which  the Fund itself would  be unable to meet  its
obligations.  Given the above limitations  on shareholder personal liability and
the nature of the  Fund's assets and operations,  the possibility of the  Fund's
being  unable to  meet its obligations  is remote  and, thus, in  the opinion of
Massachusetts counsel to  the Fund, the  risk to Fund  shareholders of  personal
liability is remote.

CODE  OF ETHICS.  Directors, officers and employees of InterCapital, Dean Witter
Services Company Inc. and the Distributor are subject to a strict Code of Ethics
adopted by those companies. The  Code of Ethics is  intended to ensure that  the
interests  of shareholders  and other clients  are placed ahead  of any personal
interest, that no undue  personal benefit is  obtained from person's  employment
activities  and that actual and potential  conflicts of interest are avoided. To
achieve these goals and comply with regulatory requirements, the Code of  Ethics
requires, among other

16
<PAGE>
things,  that personal securities transactions by  employees of the companies be
subject to an advance  clearance process to monitor  that no investment  company
managed  or advised by InterCapital ("Dean Witter  Fund") is engaged at the same
time in a purchase  or sale of the  same security. The Code  of Ethics bans  the
purchase  of  securities  in  an initial  public  offering,  and  also prohibits
engaging in futures and options transactions and profiting on short-term trading
(that is, a purchase within sixty days of a sale or a sale within sixty days  of
a purchase) of a security. In addition, investment personnel may not purchase or
sell  a security for their  personal account within thirty  days before or after

any transaction in any Dean Witter Fund  managed by them. Any violations of  the
Code  of  Ethics  are subject  to  sanctions, including  reprimand,  demotion or
suspension or  termination  of employment.  The  Code of  Ethics  comports  with
regulatory  requirements and  the recommendations  in the  recent report  by the
Investment Company Institute Advisory Group on Personal Investing.

SHAREHOLDER INQUIRIES.  All inquiries regarding  the Fund should be directed  to
the  Fund at the  telephone numbers or address  set forth on  the front cover of
this Prospectus.

                                                                              17
<PAGE>
APPENDIX
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

RATINGS OF INVESTMENTS
MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE INC. ("MOODY'S")

                                    BOND RATINGS

<TABLE>
<S>        <C>
Aaa        Bonds  which 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.
Aa         Bonds which 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 which are rated A possess many favorable  investment attributes and are to be considered  as
           upper  medium grade obligations. Factors giving security  to principal and interest are considered
           adequate, but elements may be present which suggest a susceptibility to impairment sometime in the
           future.
Baa        Bonds which are  rated Baa  are considered  as medium grade  obligations; i.e.,  they are  neither
           highly  protected nor poorly secured. Interest payments and principal security appear adequate for
           the present but certain protective elements may be lacking or may be characteristically unreliable
           over any great length of time. Such bonds lack outstanding investment characteristics and in  fact
           have speculative characteristics as well.
           Bonds rated Aaa, Aa, A and Baa are considered investment grade bonds.
Ba         Bonds  which  are  rated Ba  are  judged to  have  speculative  elements; their  future  cannot be
           considered as well assured. Often  the protection of interest and  principal payments may be  very
           moderate,  and therefore  not well  safeguarded during both  good and  bad times  over the future.
           Uncertainty of position characterizes bonds in this class.
B          Bonds which are  rated B  generally lack characteristics  of desirable  investments. Assurance  of
           interest  and principal payments  or of maintenance of  other terms of the  contract over any long
           period of time may be small.
Caa        Bonds which are rated  Caa are of poor  standing. Such issues  may be in default  or there may  be
           present elements of danger with respect to principal or interest.
Ca         Bonds  which are rated Ca present obligations which  are speculative in a high degree. Such issues
           are often in default or have other marked shortcomings.
C          Bonds which are rated C are the lowest rated  class of bonds, and issues so rated can be  regarded
           as having extremely poor prospects of ever attaining any real investment standing.
</TABLE>

    CONDITIONAL RATING:  Municipal bonds for which the security depends upon the
completion  of  some  act  or  the  fulfillment  of  some  condition  are  rated
conditionally. These  are  bonds  secured  by (a)  earnings  of  projects  under
construction,  (b) earnings of projects  unseasoned in operation experience, (c)
rentals which begin when facilities are completed, or (d) payments to which some
other limiting condition attaches. Parenthetical rating denotes probable  credit
stature upon completion of construction or elimination of basis of condition.

    RATING  REFINEMENTS:  Moody's may  apply numerical modifiers, 1,  2 and 3 in
each generic  rating classification  from  Aa through  B  in its  corporate  and
municipal  bond rating system. The modifier  1 indicates that the security ranks
in the higher end  of its generic  rating category; the  modifier 2 indicates  a
mid-range  ranking; and a modifier 3 indicates that the issue ranks in the lower
end of its generic rating category.

                            COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS

    Moody's Commercial  Paper  ratings are  opinions  of the  ability  to  repay
punctually  promissory obligations not having an  original maturity in excess of
nine months. Moody's employs the following three designations, all judged to  be
investment  grade, to indicate the relative repayment capacity of rated issuers:
Prime-1, Prime-2, Prime-3.

    Issuers rated Prime-1 have a  superior capacity for repayment of  short-term
promissory  obligations.  Issuers  rated  Prime-2  have  a  strong  capacity for
repayment of short-term promissory obligations;  and Issuers rated Prime-3  have
an  acceptable  capacity  for repayment  of  short-term  promissory obligations.
Issuers rated Not Prime do not fall within any of the Prime rating categories.

18
<PAGE>
STANDARD & POOR'S CORPORATION ("STANDARD & POOR'S")

                                    BOND RATINGS

    A  Standard  &  Poor's   bond  rating  is  a   current  assessment  of   the
creditworthiness  of  an obligor  with respect  to  a specific  obligation. This
assessment may take into consideration obligors such as guarantors, insurers, or
lessees.

    The ratings are  based on  current information  furnished by  the issuer  or
obtained  by Standard  & Poor's  from other  sources it  considers reliable. The
ratings are  based, in  varying degrees,  on the  following considerations:  (1)
likelihood  of default-capacity and willingness of  the obligor as to the timely
payment of interest and repayment of  principal in accordance with the terms  of
the  obligation;  (2)  nature  of  and provisions  of  the  obligation;  and (3)
protection afforded by, and relative position of, the obligation in the event of
bankruptcy, reorganization or other arrangement under the laws of bankruptcy and
other laws affecting creditors' rights.

    Standard & Poor's does  not perform an audit  in connection with any  rating
and  may, on occasion, rely on  unaudited financial information. The ratings may
be changed, suspended or withdrawn as a result of changes in, or  unavailability
of, such information, or for other reasons.

<TABLE>
<S>        <C>
AAA        Debt  rated AAA has the highest  rating assigned by Standard &  Poor's. Capacity to pay interest
           and repay principal is extremely strong.
AA         Debt rated AA has a very  strong capacity to pay interest  and repay principal and differs  from
           the highest-rated issues only in small degree.
A          Debt  rated  A has  a strong  capacity to  pay interest  and repay  principal although  they are
           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 debt in higher-rated categories.
           Bonds rated AAA, AA, A and BBB are considered investment grade bonds.
BB         Debt rated BB has  less near-term vulnerability  to default than  other speculative grade  debt.
           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 payment.
B          Debt  rated B  has a greater  vulnerability to  default but presently  has the  capacity to meet
           interest payments and principal repayments.  Adverse business, financial or economic  conditions
           would likely impair capacity or willingness to pay interest and repay principal.
CCC        Debt  rated  CCC has  a current  identifiable vulnerability  to default,  and is  dependent upon
           favorable business, financial and  economic conditions to meet  timely payments of interest  and
           repayments  of principal. In the event of adverse business, financial or economic conditions, it
           is not likely to have the capacity to pay interest and repay principal.
CC         The rating CC  is typically applied  to debt subordinated  to senior debt  which is assigned  an
           actual or implied CCC rating.
C          The  rating C  is typically applied  to debt  subordinated to senior  debt which  is assigned an
           actual or implied CCC- debt rating.
CI         The rating CI is reserved for income bonds on which no interest is being paid.
NR         Indicates that no rating has been requested, that there is insufficient information on which  to
           base  a rating  or that Standard  & Poor's does  not rate a  particular type of  obligation as a
           matter of policy.
           Bonds  rated  BB,  B,  CCC,  CC  and   C  are  regarded  as  having  predominantly   speculative
           characteristics  with respect to capacity to pay  interest and repay principal. BB indicates the
           least degree of speculation and C the highest degree of speculation. While such debt will likely
           have some quality and protective characteristics, these are outweighed by large uncertainties or
           major risk exposures to adverse conditions.
           Plus (+) or minus (-): The ratings from AA to  CCC may be modified by the addition of a plus  or
           minus sign to show relative standing within the major ratings categories.
           In  the case of  municipal bonds, the  foregoing ratings are  sometimes followed by  a "p" which
           indicates that the rating is provisional. A provisional rating assumes the successful completion
           of the project  being financed  by the  bonds being  rated and  indicates that  payment of  debt
           service  requirements is largely or entirely dependent upon the successful and timely completion
           of the project. This rating, however,  while addressing credit quality subsequent to  completion
           of  the project,  makes no comment  on the likelihood  or risk  of default upon  failure of such
           completion.
</TABLE>

                                                                              19
<PAGE>
                            COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS

    Standard and Poor's commercial paper rating  is a current assessment of  the
likelihood of timely payment of debt having an original maturity of no more than
365  days. The commercial  paper rating is  not a recommendation  to purchase or
sell a security. The ratings are based upon current information furnished by the
issuer or obtained by S&P from other sources it considers reliable. The  ratings
may  be  changed,  suspended,  or  withdrawn  as  a  result  of  changes  in  or
unavailability of such  information. Ratings are  graded into group  categories,
ranging  from "A"  for the  highest quality obligations  to "D"  for the lowest.
Ratings are  applicable to  both taxable  and tax-exempt  commercial paper.  The
categories are as follows:

    Issues  assigned A ratings are regarded  as having the greatest capacity for
timely payment. Issues in this category are further refined with the designation
1, 2 and 3 to indicate the relative degree of safety.

<TABLE>
<S>        <C>
A-1        indicates that the degree of safety regarding timely payment is very strong.
A-2        indicates capacity for timely  payment on issues  with this designation  is strong. However,  the
           relative degree of safety is not as overwhelming as for issues designated "A-1".
A-3        indicates  a satisfactory capacity for timely payment. Obligations carrying this designation are,
           however, somewhat  more  vulnerable to  the  adverse effects  of  changes in  circumstances  than
           obligations carrying the higher designations.
</TABLE>

20
<PAGE>

DEAN WITTER
CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES TRUST
TWO WORLD TRADE CENTER
NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10048

TRUSTEES
Michael Bozic
Charles A. Fiumefreddo
Edwin J. Garn
John R. Haire
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson
Paul Kolton
Michael E. Nugent
Philip J. Purcell
John L. Schroeder

OFFICERS
Charles A. Fiumefreddo
Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer
Sheldon Curtis
Vice President, Secretary and
General Counsel
Michael G. Knox
Vice President
Thomas F. Caloia
Treasurer

CUSTODIAN
The Bank of New York
90 Washington Street
New York, New York 10286

TRANSFER AGENT AND
DIVIDEND DISBURSING AGENT
Dean Witter Trust Company
Harborside Financial Center
Plaza Two
Jersey City, New Jersey 07311

INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
Price Waterhouse LLP
1177 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10036

INVESTMENT MANAGER
Dean Witter InterCapital Inc.


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