PRUDENTIAL U S GOVERNMENT FUND
497, 1994-08-03
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<PAGE>
                                                                       Rule 497C
                                                       Registration No. 33-01332

PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND

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

PROSPECTUS DATED AUGUST 1, 1994

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

Prudential   U.S.  Government  Fund  (the  Fund)  is  an  open-end,  diversified
management investment company, or mutual fund, whose investment objective is  to
seek  a high total  return (capital appreciation plus  high current income). The
Fund will  seek  to  achieve  this objective  primarily  by  investing  in  U.S.
Government  securities, including  U.S. Treasury  bills, notes,  bonds and other
debt  securities  issued  by  the  U.S.  Treasury,  and  obligations  issued  or
guaranteed  by U.S. Government agencies or  instrumentalities. The Fund may also
purchase and sell put and call options on U.S. Government securities and  engage
in  transactions involving futures  contracts on U.S.  Government securities and
options on such  futures. See  "How the Fund  Invests--Investment Objective  and
Policies."  There is no  assurance that the Fund's  investment objective will be
achieved. The Fund's address is One Seaport Plaza, New York, New York 10292, and
its telephone number is (800) 225-1852.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This Prospectus  sets forth  concisely the  information about  the Fund  that  a
prospective  investor should know before investing. Additional information about
the Fund  has  been filed  with  the Securities  and  Exchange Commission  in  a
Statement  of Additional Information, dated August 1, 1994, which information is
incorporated  herein  by  reference  (is  legally  considered  a  part  of  this
Prospectus)  and is  available without  charge upon request  to the  Fund at the
address or telephone number noted above.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

INVESTORS ARE ADVISED TO READ THIS PROSPECTUS AND RETAIN IT FOR FUTURE
REFERENCE.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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.
<PAGE>
                                FUND HIGHLIGHTS

  The  following summary is intended  to highlight certain information contained
in this  Prospectus  and is  qualified  in its  entirety  by the  more  detailed
information appearing elsewhere herein.

WHAT IS PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND?

  Prudential  U.S. Government  Fund is  a mutual fund.  A mutual  fund pools the
resources of investors  by selling its  shares to the  public and investing  the
proceeds  of such  sale in  a portfolio  of securities  designed to  achieve its
investment  objective.  Technically,  the  Fund  is  an  open-end,   diversified
management investment company.

WHAT IS THE FUND'S INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE?

  The  Fund's investment  objective is  high total  return (capital appreciation
plus high current income). There can  be no assurance that the Fund's  objective
will  be achieved. See "How the Fund Invests--Investment Objective and Policies"
at page 6.

RISK FACTORS AND SPECIAL CHARACTERISTICS

  In seeking to achieve its investment objective, the Fund invests primarily  in
U.S.  Government securities, including U.S. Treasury  bills, notes and bonds and
other debt securities  issued by  the U.S.  Treasury and  obligations issued  or
guaranteed  by U.S. Government agencies and instrumentalities. See "How the Fund
Invests--Investment Objective and Policies" at page 6. The Fund may also  engage
in  various hedging and income enhancement strategies, including derivatives and
the purchase and sale of put  and call options, financial futures contracts  and
related  short-term trading.  See "How  the Fund  Invests--Other Investments" at
page 8.

WHO MANAGES THE FUND?

  Prudential Mutual Fund Management, Inc. (PMF or the Manager) is the Manager of
the Fund and is compensated for its services  at an annual rate of .50 of 1%  of
the  Fund's average daily net assets. As of June 30, 1994, PMF served as manager
or administrator to  66 investment  companies, including 37  mutual funds,  with
aggregate  assets  of  approximately  $47  billion.  The  Prudential  Investment
Corporation (PIC or  the Subadviser) furnishes  investment advisory services  in
connection  with the management  of the Fund under  a Subadvisory Agreement with
PMF. See "How the Fund is Managed--Manager" at page 16.

WHO DISTRIBUTES THE FUND'S SHARES?

  Prudential Mutual Fund Distributors,  Inc. (PMFD) acts  as the Distributor  of
the  Fund's Class A  shares and is  paid an annual  distribution and service fee
which is currently being charged at the rate  of .15 of 1% of the average  daily
net assets of the Class A shares.

  Prudential  Securities Incorporated  (Prudential Securities  or PSI),  a major
securities underwriter  and  securities  and commodities  broker,  acts  as  the
Distributor  of the  Fund's Class  B and Class  C shares  and is  paid an annual
distribution and service fee which is currently being charged at the rate of .85
of 1% of the average daily net assets of the Class B shares and .75 of 1% of the
average daily  net  assets  of  the  Class  C  shares.  See  "How  the  Fund  is
Managed--Distributor" at page 17.

                                       2
<PAGE>
WHAT IS THE MINIMUM INVESTMENT?

  The  minimum initial investment for  Class A and Class  B shares is $1,000 per
class and $5,000 for Class C  shares. The minimum subsequent investment is  $100
for  all  classes.  There  is  no  minimum  investment  requirement  for certain
retirement and employee savings plans or  custodial accounts for the benefit  of
minors.  For purchases made through the Automatic Savings Accumulation Plan, the
minimum initial and subsequent investment is $50. See "Shareholder Guide--How to
Buy Shares of the Fund" at page 22 and "Shareholder Guide--Shareholder Services"
at page 31.

HOW DO I PURCHASE SHARES?

  You may  purchase shares  of  the Fund  through Prudential  Securities,  Pruco
Securities  Corporation (Prusec) or directly from the Fund, through its transfer
agent, Prudential Mutual Fund Services, Inc. (PMFS or the Transfer Agent) at the
net asset value per share (NAV)  next determined after receipt of your  purchase
order  by the Transfer Agent or Prudential  Securities plus a sales charge which
may be imposed either (i) at the time of purchase (Class A shares) or (ii) on  a
deferred basis (Class B or Class C shares). See "How the Fund Values its Shares"
at page 19 and "Shareholder Guide--How to Buy Shares of the Fund" at page 22.

WHAT ARE MY PURCHASE ALTERNATIVES?

  The Fund offers three classes of shares:

        - Class A Shares:    Sold  with an initial sales  charge of up to
                             4% of the offering price.

        - Class B Shares:    Sold without an initial sales charge but are
                             subject  to  a  contingent  deferred   sales
                             charge or CDSC (declining from 5% to zero of
                             the  lower  of  the amount  invested  or the
                             redemption proceeds) which  will be  imposed
                             on certain redemptions made within six years
                             of  purchase.  Although Class  B  shares are
                             subject to higher ongoing
                             distribution-related expenses  than Class  A
                             shares,  Class  B shares  will automatically
                             convert to Class A shares (which are subject
                             to   lower   ongoing    distribution-related
                             expenses)  approximately  seven  years after
                             purchase.

        - Class C Shares:    Sold without an initial sales charge and for
                             one year after purchase, are subject to a 1%
                             CDSC on  redemptions. Like  Class B  shares,
                             Class C shares are subject to higher ongoing
                             distribution-related  expenses than  Class A
                             shares but do not convert to another class.

  See "Shareholder Guide--Alternative Purchase Plan" at page 23.

HOW DO I SELL MY SHARES?

  You may  redeem your  shares at  any time  at the  NAV next  determined  after
Prudential  Securities or the Transfer Agent  receives your sell order. However,
the proceeds of redemptions of  Class B and Class C  shares may be subject to  a
CDSC. See "Shareholder Guide--How To Sell Your Shares" at page 26.

HOW ARE DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS PAID?

  The  Fund expects to pay  dividends of net investment  income monthly and make
distributions of  any  net  capital  gains  at  least  annually.  Dividends  and
distributions  will be automatically reinvested in additional shares of the Fund
at NAV without a  sales charge unless you  request that they be  paid to you  in
cash. See "Taxes, Dividends and Distributions" at page 20.

                                       3
<PAGE>
                                 FUND EXPENSES
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES+              CLASS A SHARES        CLASS B SHARES               CLASS C SHARES
                                               --------------   ------------------------     ------------------------
<S>                                            <C>              <C>                          <C>
    Maximum Sales Load Imposed on Purchases
     (as a percentage of offering price).....        4%                   None                         None
    Maximum Sales Load or Deferred Sales Load
     Imposed on Reinvested Dividends.........       None                  None                         None
    Deferred Sales Load (as a percentage of
     original purchase price or redemption
     proceeds, whichever is lower)...........       None        5%   during   the  first      1% on redemptions made
                                                                year, decreasing  by  1%        within one year of
                                                                annually  to  1%  in the             purchase
                                                                fifth  and  sixth  years
                                                                and 0% the seventh year*
    Redemption Fees..........................       None                  None                         None
    Exchange Fee.............................       None                  None                         None

<CAPTION>
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES                 CLASS A SHARES        CLASS B SHARES              CLASS C SHARES**
                                               --------------   ------------------------     ------------------------
<S>                                            <C>              <C>                          <C>
(AS A PERCENTAGE OF AVERAGE NET ASSETS)
    Management Fees..........................        .50%                  .50%                         .50%
    12b-1 Fees++.............................        .15%                  .85%                         .75%
    Other Expenses...........................        .31%                  .31%                         .31%
                                                   -----                 -----                        -----
    Total Fund Operating Expenses............        .96%                 1.66%                        1.56%
                                                   -----                 -----                        -----
                                                   -----                 -----                        -----
- ------------------
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXAMPLE                                                       1 YEAR      3 YEARS      5 YEARS      10 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:
    Class A................................................    $ 49          $69         $ 91         $153
    Class B................................................    $ 67          $82         $100         $169
    Class C**..............................................    $ 26          $49         $ 85         $186
You would pay the following expenses on the same
  investment, assuming no redemption:
    Class A................................................    $ 49          $69         $ 91         $153
    Class B................................................    $ 17          $52         $ 90         $169
    Class C**..............................................    $ 16          $49         $ 85         $186
The  above example with respect to Class B shares is based on restated data for the Fund's fiscal year ended
October 31, 1993. The above example with respect to  Class C shares is based upon expenses expected to  have
been  incurred if Class C  shares had been in existence  during the fiscal year  ended October 31, 1993. THE
EXAMPLE SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED A REPRESENTATION OF PAST OR FUTURE EXPENSES. ACTUAL EXPENSES MAY BE GREATER
OR LESS THAN THOSE SHOWN.
The purpose of this table  is to assist investors  in understanding the various  costs and expenses that  an
investor  in the  Fund will  bear, whether  directly or  indirectly. For  more complete  descriptions of the
various costs and expenses, see  "How the Fund is Managed."  "Other Expenses" include operating expenses  of
the  Fund, such as Trustees' and professional fees,  registration fees, reports to shareholders and transfer
agency and custodian fees.
<FN>
- ---------------
   * Class B shares will automatically  convert to Class A shares  approximately
     seven    years   after   purchase.   See   "Shareholder   Guide--Conversion
     Feature--Class B Shares."
  ** Estimated based  on expenses  expected to  have been  incurred if  Class  C
     shares had been in existence during the fiscal year ended October 31, 1993.
   + Pursuant  to rules of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.,
     the aggregate initial sales charges, deferred sales charges and asset-based
     sales charges on shares  of the Fund  may not exceed  6.25% of total  gross
     sales,  subject to certain exclusions. This  6.25% limitation is imposed on
     the Fund  rather  than on  a  per shareholder  basis.  Therefore  long-term
     shareholders  of the  Fund may  pay more  in total  sales charges  than the
     economic equivalent  of  6.25% of  such  shareholders' investment  in  such
     shares. See "How the Fund is Managed--Distributor."
  ++ Although  the Class A, Class  B and Class C  Distribution and Service Plans
     provide that the Fund  may pay up  to an annual  rate of .30  of 1% of  the
     average  daily net assets of the Class A shares and 1% of the average daily
     net assets of each of the Class  B and Class C shares, the Distributor  has
     agreed to limit its distribution fees with respect to Class A shares of the
     Fund  to .15  of 1% of  the average  daily net asset  value of  the Class A
     shares, with respect to the Class B shares of the Fund to .85 of 1% of  the
     average  daily net asset value  of the Class B  shares and, with respect to
     the Class C shares of the Fund to .75 of 1% of the average daily net assets
     of the Class C shares,  each for the fiscal  year ending October 31,  1994.
     See  "How  the  Fund  is  Managed--Distributor."  Total  operating expenses
     without such limitations would be 1.11%  for Class A shares, and 1.81%  for
     Class B and Class C shares.
</TABLE>

                                       4
<PAGE>
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
                (FOR A SHARE OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT EACH PERIOD)

  The following financial highlights (with the exception of the six months ended
April   30,  1994),  have  been  audited   by  Deloitte  &  Touche,  independent
accountants, whose report  thereon was unqualified.  This information should  be
read  in  conjunction with  the financial  statements  and notes  thereto, which
appear in  the  Statement of  Additional  Information. The  following  financial
highlights  contain selected data for a Class  A and Class B share of beneficial
interest outstanding,  total return,  ratios  to average  net assets  and  other
supplemental  data for the  periods indicated. The information  is based on data
contained in the financial statements. No Class C shares were outstanding during
the periods indicated.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  CLASS A
                                 -----------------------------------------
                                   SIX
                                  MONTHS
                                  ENDED                                       JANUARY 22,
                                  APRIL                                          1990@
                                   30,          YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31,          THROUGH
                                   1994      -----------------------------    OCTOBER 31,
                                 (UNAUDITED)  1993       1992       1991         1990
                                 --------    -------    -------    -------    -----------
<S>                              <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
 PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value, beginning of
 period.......................   $ 10.59     $ 9.69     $ 9.49     $ 8.97       $ 9.31
                                 --------    -------    -------    -------    -----------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS:
Net investment income.........       .30        .64        .68        .66          .55
Net realized and unrealized
 gain (loss)
 on investment transactions...      (.96)       .90        .20        .52         (.34)
                                 --------    -------    -------    -------    -----------
Total from investment
 operations...................      (.66)      1.54        .88       1.18          .21
                                 --------    -------    -------    -------    -----------
LESS DISTRIBUTIONS:
Dividends from net investment
 income.......................      (.30)      (.64)      (.68)      (.66)        (.55)
Distributions from paid-in
 capital......................        --         --         --         --           --
                                 --------    -------    -------    -------    -----------
Total distributions...........      (.30)      (.64)      (.68)      (.66)        (.55)
                                 --------    -------    -------    -------    -----------
Net asset value, end of
 period.......................   $  9.63     $10.59     $ 9.69     $ 9.49       $ 8.97
                                 --------    -------    -------    -------    -----------
                                 --------    -------    -------    -------    -----------
TOTAL RETURN#.................     (6.28)%    16.43%      9.39%     13.72%        2.16%
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of period
 (000)........................    $7,301     $6,849     $5,024     $2,574       $1,617
Average net assets (000)......    $7,104     $6,339     $3,769     $2,158         $918
Ratios to average net assets:
  Expenses, including
   distribution fees..........      1.01%*      .96%       .94%      1.24%        1.08%*
  Expenses, excluding
   distribution fees..........       .86%*      .81%       .79%      1.09%         .94%*
  Net investment income.......      6.03%*     6.35%      6.92%      7.24%        7.16%*
Portfolio turnover............        24%        66%        66%       236%         608%

<CAPTION>
                                                                         CLASS B
                                 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                   SIX
                                  MONTHS
                                  ENDED                                                                       NOVEMBER 7,
                                  APRIL                                                                         1986++
                                   30,                          YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31,                          THROUGH
                                   1994     ---------------------------------------------------------------   OCTOBER 31,
                                 (UNAUDITED)   1993      1992       1991       1990     1989+++     1988++       1987
                                 --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   -----------
<S>                              <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
 PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value, beginning of
 period.......................   $  10.60   $   9.70   $   9.50   $   8.97   $   9.54   $   9.05   $   9.04     $10.00
                                 --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   -----------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS:
Net investment income.........        .27        .55        .59        .59        .62        .64        .66+       .65+
Net realized and unrealized
 gain (loss)
 on investment transactions...       (.96)       .90        .20        .53       (.57)       .52        .13       (.85)
                                 --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   -----------
Total from investment
 operations...................       (.69)      1.45        .79       1.12        .05       1.16        .79       (.20)
                                 --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   -----------
LESS DISTRIBUTIONS:
Dividends from net investment
 income.......................       (.27)      (.55)      (.59)      (.59)      (.62)      (.64)      (.66)      (.65)
Distributions from paid-in
 capital......................         --         --         --         --         --       (.03)      (.12)      (.11)
                                 --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   -----------
Total distributions...........       (.27)      (.55)      (.59)      (.59)      (.62)      (.67)      (.78)      (.76)
                                 --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   -----------
Net asset value, end of
 period.......................   $   9.64   $  10.60   $   9.70   $   9.50   $   8.97   $   9.54   $   9.05     $ 9.04
                                 --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   -----------
                                 --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   -----------
TOTAL RETURN#.................      (6.64)%    15.44%      8.46%     12.86%       .64%     13.53%      8.79%     (2.21)%
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of period
 (000)........................   $143,447   $166,907   $155,143   $158,790   $172,521   $169,825   $169,261   $213,078
Average net assets (000)......   $156,639   $162,107   $154,502   $168,421   $174,276   $156,322   $191,342   $184,510
Ratios to average net assets:
  Expenses, including
   distribution fees..........       1.79%*     1.81%      1.79%      2.09%      1.99%      2.05%      1.76%+     1.13%+*

  Expenses, excluding
   distribution fees..........        .86%*      .81%       .79%      1.09%       .99%      1.06%       .75%+      .23%+*

  Net investment income.......       5.25%*     5.50%      6.07%      6.39%      6.89%      6.95%      7.36%+     6.76%+*

Portfolio turnover............         24%        66%        66%       236%       608%       392%        73%        64%
<FN>
- -----------------
  @ Commencement of offering of Class A shares.
  # Total return does not consider the  effects of sales loads. Total return  is
    calculated  assuming a purchase of shares on the first day and a sale on the
    last day of each period reported and includes reinvestment of dividends  and
    distributions.  Total returns for periods  of less than a  full year are not
    annualized.
 ++ Commencement of investment operations.
  * Annualized.
  + Net of expense subsidy and fee waiver.
 ++ On March  1, 1988,  Prudential Mutual  Fund Management,  Inc. succeeded  The
    Prudential Insurance Company of America as manager of the Fund.
+++ Effective  September 5, 1989,  the Fund's investment  objective changed from
    seeking a high current return to  seeking a high total return.  Accordingly,
    historical  per share data and ratios may not accurately reflect future data
    and ratios.
</TABLE>

                                       5
<PAGE>
                              HOW THE FUND INVESTS

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES

  THE FUND'S  INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE  IS  TO SEEK  A  HIGH TOTAL  RETURN  (CAPITAL
APPRECIATION  PLUS  HIGH CURRENT  INCOME). THE  FUND WILL  SEEK TO  ACHIEVE THIS
OBJECTIVE PRIMARILY BY INVESTING IN  U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, INCLUDING  U.S.
TREASURY  BILLS,  NOTES, BONDS  AND  OTHER DEBT  SECURITIES  ISSUED BY  THE U.S.
TREASURY, AND OBLIGATIONS ISSUED  OR GUARANTEED BY  U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES  OR
INSTRUMENTALITIES.  THESE GUARANTEES APPLY ONLY TO  THE PAYMENT OF PRINCIPAL AND
INTEREST ON  THESE SECURITIES  AND DO  NOT EXTEND  TO THE  SECURITIES' YIELD  OR
VALUE,  WHICH ARE LIKELY TO VARY WITH FLUCTUATIONS IN INTEREST RATES, NOR DO THE
GUARANTEES EXTEND TO THE  YIELD OR VALUE OF  THE FUND'S SHARES. SEE  "ADDITIONAL
INVESTMENT  INFORMATION--MORTGAGE-RELATED SECURITIES  ISSUED BY  U.S. GOVERNMENT
INSTRUMENTALITIES" IN THE STATEMENT OF  ADDITIONAL INFORMATION. AT LEAST 65%  OF
THE  TOTAL ASSETS OF  THE FUND WILL  BE INVESTED IN  U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.
THERE CAN BE NO ASSURANCE THAT THE FUND WILL MEET ITS OBJECTIVE. See "Investment
Objectives and Policies" in the Statement of Additional Information.

  THE FUND'S INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE IS A FUNDAMENTAL POLICY AND MAY NOT BE CHANGED
WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF A MAJORITY  OF THE FUND'S OUTSTANDING VOTING  SECURITIES
AS  DEFINED IN THE  INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT  OF 1940, AS  AMENDED (THE INVESTMENT
COMPANY ACT). FUND  POLICIES THAT  ARE NOT FUNDAMENTAL  MAY BE  MODIFIED BY  THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

  U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

  U.S. TREASURY SECURITIES

  THE  FUND WILL  INVEST IN  U.S. TREASURY  SECURITIES, INCLUDING  BILLS, NOTES,
BONDS AND OTHER DEBT SECURITIES ISSUED  BY THE U.S. TREASURY. These  instruments
are  direct obligations of the  U.S. Government and, as  such, are backed by the
"full faith and  credit" of the  United States. They  differ primarily in  their
interest  rates,  the  lengths  of  their  maturities  and  the  dates  of their
issuances.

  SECURITIES ISSUED OR GUARANTEED BY U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES AND
  INSTRUMENTALITIES

  THE FUND WILL INVEST IN SECURITIES  ISSUED BY AGENCIES OF THE U.S.  GOVERNMENT
OR  INSTRUMENTALITIES OF THE U.S. GOVERNMENT. These obligations, including those
which are guaranteed by federal agencies or instrumentalities, may or may not be
backed by the full  faith and credit  of the United  States. Obligations of  the
Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA), the Farmers Home Administration
and the Export-Import Bank are backed by the full faith and credit of the United
States. In the case of securities not backed by the full faith and credit of the
United  States,  the  Fund  must  look  principally  to  the  agency  issuing or
guaranteeing the obligation for ultimate repayment and may not be able to assert
a claim against the United States if the agency or instrumentality does not meet
its commitments. Securities in which the Fund may invest which are not backed by
the full faith and credit of the United States include obligations such as those
issued  by  the  Tennessee  Valley  Authority,  the  Federal  National  Mortgage
Association  (FNMA), the Federal Home Loan  Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC) and the
United States Postal Service,  each of which  has the right  to borrow from  the
United  States Treasury to meet its  obligations, and obligations of the Federal
Farm Credit Bank and the  Federal Home Loan Bank,  the obligations of which  may
only be satisfied by the individual credit of the issuing agency. GNMA, FNMA and
FHLMC  investments may  include collateralized mortgage  obligations. See "Other
Investments" below.

                                       6
<PAGE>
  Obligations issued or guaranteed  as to principal and  interest by the  United
States  Government may be acquired by the Fund in the form of custodial receipts
that evidence ownership of future interest payments, principal payments or  both
on  certain United States Treasury notes or bonds. Such notes and bonds are held
in custody by  a bank  on behalf  of the  owners. These  custodial receipts  are
commonly referred to as Treasury strips.

  MORTGAGE-RELATED SECURITIES ISSUED BY U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES AND
  INSTRUMENTALITIES

  THE   FUND  WILL   INVEST  IN   MORTGAGE-BACKED  SECURITIES   INCLUDING  THOSE
REPRESENTING AN UNDIVIDED OWNERSHIP INTEREST IN A POOL OF MORTGAGES, E.G., GNMA,
FNMA  AND  FHLMC  CERTIFICATES.  The  U.S.  Government  or  the  issuing  agency
guarantees  the payment of interest and  principal of these securities. However,
the guarantees do not extend to the securities' yield or value, which are likely
to vary inversely  with fluctuations in  interest rates, nor  do the  guarantees
extend  to the yield or  value of the Fund's  shares. See "Additional Investment
Information--Mortgage-Related   Securities    Issued    by    U.S.    Government
Instrumentalities"   in   the   Statement  of   Additional   Information.  These
certificates are in  most cases  "pass-through" instruments,  through which  the
holder  receives  a  share  of  all interest  and  principal  payments  from the
mortgages  underlying  the  certificate,  net  of  certain  fees.  Because   the
prepayment  characteristics of the underlying mortgages vary, it is not possible
to predict accurately the average life  or realized yield of a particular  issue
of  pass-through certificates.  Mortgage-backed securities are  often subject to
more rapid repayment than their stated maturity date would indicate as a  result
of  the  pass-through of  prepayments of  principal  on the  underlying mortgage
obligations. For  example,  securities  backed  by  mortgages  with  thirty-year
maturities  are customarily treated  as prepaying fully in  the twelfth year and
securities backed  by  mortgages with  fifteen-year  maturities are  treated  as
prepaying fully in the seventh year. During periods of declining interest rates,
prepayment of mortgages underlying mortgage-backed securities can be expected to
accelerate.  The  Fund's  ability  to  maintain  a  portfolio  of  high-yielding
mortgage-backed securities  will  be  adversely  affected  to  the  extent  that
prepayments  of  mortgages must  be reinvested  in  securities which  have lower
yields than  the prepaid  mortgages. Moreover,  prepayments of  mortgages  which
underlie securities purchased at a premium could result in capital losses.

  THE  FUND MAY  ALSO INVEST  IN BALLOON  PAYMENT MORTGAGE-BACKED  SECURITIES. A
balloon payment mortgage-backed security is an amortizing mortgage security with
installments of  principal  and  interest,  the last  installment  of  which  is
predominantly principal.

  THE  FUND  MAY  ALSO  INVEST IN  MORTGAGE  PASS-THROUGH  SECURITIES  WHERE ALL
INTEREST PAYMENTS GO TO ONE CLASS  OF HOLDERS (INTEREST ONLY SECURITIES OR  IOS)
AND  ALL PRINCIPAL  PAYMENTS GO  TO A  SECOND CLASS  OF HOLDERS  (PRINCIPAL ONLY
SECURITIES OR POS). These securities are commonly referred to as mortgage-backed
securities strips  or  MBS  strips. The  yields  to  maturity on  IOs  are  very
sensitive  to  the rate  of principal  payments  (including prepayments)  on the
related underlying mortgage assets, and a  rapid rate of principal payments  may
have  a material adverse effect on yield to maturity. If the underlying mortgage
assets experience greater  than anticipated prepayments  of principal, the  Fund
may  not fully recoup its initial investment in these securities. Conversely, if
the underlying mortgage assets experience  less than anticipated prepayments  of
principal, the yield on POs could be materially adversely affected.

  ZERO-COUPON BONDS

  THE  FUND MAY  INVEST IN  ZERO-COUPON U.S.  GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. Zero-coupon
bonds are generally  purchased at a  discount from the  face amount because  the
buyer  receives only the right  to receive a fixed payment  on a certain date in
the future and does  not receive any periodic  interest payments. The effect  of
owning  instruments which do not make current  interest payments is that a fixed
yield is earned not only on the original investment but also, in effect, on  all
discount   accretion  during  the   life  of  the   obligations.  This  implicit
reinvestment of earnings at the same rate eliminates the risk of being unable to
reinvest distributions  at  a  rate  as  high  as  the  implicit  yield  on  the
zero-coupon  bond,  but at  the  same time  eliminates  the holder's  ability to
reinvest at higher rates in the  future. For this reason, zero-coupon bonds  are
subject to substantially greater price fluctuations

                                       7
<PAGE>
during  periods of changing market interest rates than are comparable securities
which pay interest currently, which fluctuation increases the longer the  period
to maturity.

  Although  the Fund does not receive  interest payments on zero-coupon bonds in
cash, it  is  required  to accrue  interest  on  such bonds  for  tax  purposes.
Accordingly, in order to meet the requirement that it distribute at least 90% of
its  net investment income and net short-term gains earned in each taxable year,
the Fund may have to liquidate securities or borrow money. To date, the Fund has
not engaged in borrowing  or liquidated securities solely  or primarily for  the
purpose  of meeting income distribution requirements attributable to investments
in zero-coupon bonds. See "Taxes" in the Statement of Additional Information.

  Only zero-coupon government securities issued  as such by the U.S.  Government
under  its  Separate Trading  of  Registered Interest  and  Principal Securities
(STRIPS) program  are  treated  by  the  Fund  as  U.S.  Government  securities.
Zero-coupon  securities  created by  financial institutions  (usually investment
banks) such as the Certificates of Accrual on Treasury securities (CATS) created
by Salomon Brothers, Inc.  and the Lehman  Investment Opportunity Notes  (LIONS)
created  by Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc., may  be purchased by the Fund, subject
to the 35% limit on "Other Investments," described below.

  ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

  THE FUND MAY INVEST IN ADJUSTABLE RATE U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.  Adjustable
rate  securities are debt securities having interest rates which are adjusted or
reset at periodic intervals ranging from one month to three years. The  interest
rate  of an  adjustable rate security  typically responds to  changes in general
market levels of interest. The interest  paid on any particular adjustable  rate
security  is  a function  of  the index  upon which  the  interest rate  of that
security is based.

  The adjustable rate  feature of the  securities in which  the Fund may  invest
will  tend to reduce sharp changes in the  Fund's net asset value in response to
normal interest rate fluctuations. As the coupon rates of the Fund's  adjustable
rate  securities are  reset periodically,  yields of  these portfolio securities
will reflect changes in market rates and should cause the net asset value of the
Fund's shares to  fluctuate less dramatically  than that of  a fund invested  in
long-term  fixed rate securities. However, while  the adjustable rate feature of
such securities will tend to limit sharp swings in the Fund's net asset value in
response to movements in general market  interest rates, it is anticipated  that
during  periods of fluctuations  in interest rates,  the net asset  value of the
Fund will fluctuate. See "Other Investments" below.

OTHER INVESTMENTS

  AT LEAST  65% OF  THE  TOTAL ASSETS  OF  THE FUND  WILL  BE INVESTED  IN  U.S.
GOVERNMENT  SECURITIES, AS DESCRIBED ABOVE. U.S. Government securities which are
purchased pursuant  to repurchase  agreements  or on  a when-issued  or  delayed
delivery  basis will  be treated as  U.S. Government securities  for purposes of
this calculation.  See  "Repurchase  Agreements" and  "When-Issued  and  Delayed
Delivery Securities" below.

  UP  TO 35%  OF THE TOTAL  ASSETS OF THE  FUND MAY BE  COMMITTED TO INVESTMENTS
OTHER THAN  U.S.  GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.  These  investments would  include  the
securities  described  in  this  subsection  ("Other  Investments")  as  well as
purchased put and call options on securities and purchased put and call  options
on  futures contracts. See  "Options Transactions" and  "Transactions in Futures
Contracts and Options Thereon" below.

  THE FUND MAY ALSO INVEST IN DEBT  SECURITIES OF COMPANIES WHICH ARE RATED,  OR
ARE ISSUED BY COMPANIES THAT HAVE OUTSTANDING DEBT SECURITIES RATED, A OR HIGHER
BY STANDARD & POOR'S RATINGS GROUP, MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE OR BY A NATIONALLY
RECOGNIZED  STATISTICAL RATING  ORGANIZATION (NRSRO), OR,  IF NOT  RATED, ARE OF
COMPARABLE QUALITY IN THE OPINION OF THE FUND'S INVESTMENT ADVISER. The Fund has
no limitations with respect to the  maturities of portfolio securities in  which
it  may invest. The  prices of debt securities  generally increase when interest
rates decline  and  decrease  when  interest rates  rise.  See  "Description  of
Security Ratings" in the Appendix to the Statement of Additional Information.

                                       8
<PAGE>
  THE  FUND IS PERMITTED TO INVEST UP TO 20% OF ITS TOTAL ASSETS IN HIGH QUALITY
MONEY MARKET INSTRUMENTS,  INCLUDING COMMERCIAL PAPER  OF DOMESTIC  CORPORATIONS
AND  CERTIFICATES  OF DEPOSIT,  BANKERS'  ACCEPTANCES AND  OTHER  OBLIGATIONS OF
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN BANKS. Such obligations  will, at the time of purchase,  be
rated  within the two highest quality  grades as determined by Moody's Investors
Service or Standard  & Poor's  Ratings Group (or  another nationally  recognized
statistical  rating organization (NRSRO)) or, if  unrated, will be of equivalent
quality in the judgment of the Fund's investment adviser.

  THE FUND MAY INVEST  IN OBLIGATIONS OF FOREIGN  BANKS AND FOREIGN BRANCHES  OF
U.S.  BANKS ONLY IF AFTER GIVING EFFECT  TO SUCH INVESTMENT ALL SUCH INVESTMENTS
WOULD CONSTITUTE LESS  THAN 10% OF  THE FUND'S TOTAL  ASSETS (DETERMINED AT  THE
TIME  OF  INVESTMENT).  These  investments  may  be  subject  to  certain risks,
including future political and economic developments, the possible imposition of
withholding taxes on interest income, the seizure or nationalization of  foreign
deposits and foreign exchange controls or other restrictions. In addition, there
may  be  less publicly  available information  about a  foreign bank  or foreign
branch of a U.S. bank  than about a domestic bank  and such entities may not  be
subject  to the same accounting,  auditing and financial recordkeeping standards
and requirements as domestic banks.

  THE FUND MAY INVEST IN DEBT SECURITIES WHICH ARE DENOMINATED IN UNITED  STATES
DOLLARS  AND THAT ARE ISSUED BY  FOREIGN CORPORATIONS, FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS OR BY
SUPRANATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS  such as  the  World Bank,  which was  chartered  to
finance  development  projects  in  developing  member  countries;  the European
Community, which is a twelve-nation organization engaged in cooperative economic
activities; the European Coal and Steel Community, which is an economic union of
various European nations' steel and  coal industries; and the Asian  Development
Bank,  which is  an international  development bank  established to  lend funds,
promote investment and  provide technical  assistance to member  nations in  the
Asian and Pacific regions.

  THE  FUND MAY ALSO PURCHASE  PRIVATE MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH SECURITIES. Private
mortgage pass-through  securities are  structured similarly  to GNMA,  FNMA  and
FHLMC  mortgage pass-through  securities and  are issued  by originators  of and
investors in mortgage loans, including depository institutions, mortgage  banks,
investment  banks  and  special  purpose subsidiaries  of  the  foregoing. These
securities usually are backed by a pool of conventional fixed rate or adjustable
rate mortgage loans.  Since private mortgage  pass-through securities  typically
are  not guaranteed  by an  entity having  the credit  status of  GNMA, FNMA and
FHLMC, such securities generally are structured with one or more types of credit
enhancement.  The  Fund  will   only  purchase  private  mortgage   pass-through
securities that are rated A or better by a NRSRO.

  THE  FUND MAY ALSO PURCHASE COLLATERALIZED  MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (CMOS). A CMO
is a security issued by a corporation or a U.S. Government instrumentality which
is backed  by  a  portfolio  of mortgages  or  mortgage-backed  securities.  The
issuer's  obligation to make  interest and principal payments  is secured by the
underlying portfolio  of  mortgages  or  mortgage-backed  securities.  CMOs  are
partitioned  into several classes with a ranked priority by which the classes of
obligations are redeemed. The Fund  may invest in CMOs  issued by GNMA, FNMA  or
FHLMC  and in privately issued CMOs  which are collateralized by mortgage-backed
securities issued  by GNMA,  FHLMC or  FNMA or  by whole  loan-private  mortgage
pass-through  securities and by balloon payment mortgage-backed securities. CMOs
issued by GNMA,  FHLMC or  FNMA are  considered U.S.  Government securities  for
purposes  of  this Prospectus.  In  reliance on  recently  enacted rules  and on
interpretations of  the Securities  and Exchange  Commission (SEC),  the  Fund's
investments in certain qualifying CMOs are not subject to the Investment Company
Act's  limitation on acquiring  interests in other  investment companies. To the
extent the issuer of a privately issued  CMO is considered to be an  "investment
company"  under these  rules and interpretations,  the Fund's  investment in the
CMOs of such  issuer will  be limited to  no more  than 5% of  the Fund's  total
assets,  and the  Fund's investment in  all such CMOs,  together with securities
issued by other  investment companies, will  not exceed 5%  of the Fund's  total
assets.   See  "Additional  Investment   Information--  Collateralized  Mortgage
Obligations" in the Statement of Additional Information.

  THE FUND  MAY  ALSO  PURCHASE  ZERO-COUPON  SECURITIES  CREATED  BY  FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONS. See "Zero-Coupon Bonds" above.

  THE  FUND MAY  ALSO PURCHASE  NON-U.S. GOVERNMENT  ADJUSTABLE RATE SECURITIES.
Adjustable rate  securities  allow  the  Fund to  participate  in  increases  in
interest  rates  through periodic  interest rate  adjustments resulting  in both
higher yields and

                                       9
<PAGE>
lower price fluctuations.  During periods  of declining  interest rates,  coupon
rates  may readjust downward resulting in lower yields to the Fund. The value of
an adjustable rate  security is  unlikely to  rise during  periods of  declining
interest   rates  to   the  same   extent  as   fixed  rate   instruments.  With
mortgage-backed securities,  interest rate  declines may  result in  accelerated
prepayment  of mortgages with the result  that proceeds from prepayments will be
reinvested at lower  interest rates.  During periods of  rising interest  rates,
changes  in the coupon rate will lag behind changes in the market rate resulting
in a lower net asset  value until the coupon  resets to market rates.  Investors
who  sell shares before the interest  rates in portfolio securities are adjusted
could suffer  some  loss  of  principal. Adjustable  rate  securities  are  also
typically  subject  to  maximum increases  and  decreases in  the  interest rate
adjustment which can be  made on any  one adjustment date, in  any one year,  or
during the life of the security. In the event of dramatic increases or decreases
in  prevailing market interest rates,  the value of the  Fund may fluctuate more
substantially since these limits may  prevent the security from fully  adjusting
its  interest rate  to the  prevailing market  rates. See  "Adjustable Rate U.S.
Government Securities" above.

  THE FUND MAY ALSO PURCHASE  ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE SECURITIES (ARMS),  which
are pass-through mortgage securities collateralized by mortgages with adjustable
rather  than  fixed  rates.  ARMs  eligible for  inclusion  in  a  mortgage pool
generally provide for  a fixed  initial mortgage  interest rate  for either  the
first  three,  six,  twelve,  thirteen, thirty-six  or  sixty  scheduled monthly
payments. Thereafter,  the interest  rates are  subject to  periodic  adjustment
based on changes to a designated benchmark index.

  ARMs contain maximum and minimum rates beyond which the mortgage interest rate
may  not  vary over  the lifetime  of  the security.  In addition,  certain ARMs
provide for additional limitations on the  maximum amount by which the  mortgage
interest  rate  may  adjust  for any  single  adjustment  period. Alternatively,
certain ARMs contain limitations on changes in the required monthly payment.  In
the  event that a monthly payment is not sufficient to pay the interest accruing
on an ARM, any  such excess interest  is added to the  principal balance of  the
mortgage  loan, which is repaid through  future monthly payments. If the monthly
payment for such an instrument  exceeds the sum of  the interest accrued at  the
applicable  mortgage interest  rate and the  principal payment  required at such
point to amortize the outstanding principal  balance over the remaining term  of
the  loan,  the excess  is  utilized to  reduce  the then  outstanding principal
balance of the ARM.

  THE FUND MAY ALSO INVEST IN ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES. Through the use of trusts
and special purpose subsidiaries, various types of assets, primarily  automobile
and  credit card receivables,  have been securitized  in pass-through structures
similar to  mortgage  pass-through  structures or  in  a  pay-through  structure
similar  to the collateralized mortgage structure.  The Fund may invest in these
and other types of asset-backed securities which may be developed in the future.
Asset-backed  securities  present  certain  risks  that  are  not  presented  by
mortgage-backed  securities. Primarily, these securities do not have the benefit
of the same security interest in the related collateral. Credit card receivables
are generally unsecured. In connection with automobile receivables, the security
interests in the underlying automobiles are often not transferred when the  pool
is  created, with the resulting possibility that the collateral could be resold.
In general, these types of loans are of shorter average life than mortgage loans
and are less likely to have substantial prepayments.

  OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS

  THE FUND WRITES (I.E., SELLS) COVERED PUT AND CALL OPTIONS ON U.S.  GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES.  When the  Fund writes  an option,  it receives  a premium  which it
retains whether or not the option is exercised. The Fund's principal reason  for
writing  options  is to  realize,  through the  receipt  of premiums,  a greater
current return than would be realized on the underlying securities alone.

  THERE IS NO  LIMITATION ON  THE AMOUNT  OF CALL  OPTIONS THE  FUND MAY  WRITE.
HOWEVER,  THE FUND MAY ONLY  WRITE COVERED PUT OPTIONS  TO THE EXTENT THAT COVER
FOR SUCH OPTIONS DOES NOT EXCEED 50%  OF THE FUND'S NET ASSETS. See  "Additional
Investment Information--Options Transactions and Related Risks" in the Statement
of Additional Information.

  THE  FUND MAY PURCHASE PUT AND CALL OPTIONS ON U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. The
Fund may  purchase call  options on  U.S. Government  securities it  intends  to
acquire  in order  to hedge  against an  anticipated market  appreciation in the
price of the

                                       10
<PAGE>
underlying securities at limited risk and with a limited cash outlay. Similarly,
the Fund may  purchase call  options on U.S.  Government securities  as a  hedge
against appreciation in the value of other debt securities it intends to acquire
when  there  is a  high  degree of  correlation between  the  value of  the U.S.
Government securities underlying the call option and the value of the securities
to be acquired.  If the market  price does  rise as anticipated,  the Fund  will
benefit from that rise but only to the extent that the rise exceeds the premiums
paid.  If the  anticipated rise  does not  occur or  if it  does not  exceed the
premium, the Fund will bear the  expense of the option premiums and  transaction
costs without gaining an offsetting benefit. If the Fund purchases a call option
on  U.S. Government securities as  a hedge against appreciation  in the value of
other debt securities it  intends to acquire, there  is an additional risk  that
the  correlation between the two values will not be as close as anticipated. The
Fund may also purchase a call option to close an existing option position.

  The Fund may purchase put options  on U.S. Government securities in an  effort
to  protect the value of a security  which it owns against a substantial decline
in market  value (protective  puts). The  Fund would  use this  strategy if  the
Fund's  investment adviser believes that a  defensive posture is warranted for a
portion of the  portfolio. Protection  is provided during  the life  of the  put
because  the put gives the Fund the right to sell the underlying security at the
put exercise price, regardless of a decline in the underlying security's  market
price below the exercise price. This right protects the Fund from the security's
possible  decline in value below the strike price of the option. Any loss to the
Fund is limited  to the  premium paid for,  and commissions  paid in  connection
with,  the put  plus the  initial excess,  if any,  of the  market price  of the
underlying security over the put's exercise price. However, if the market  price
of  the security  increases, the  profit the  Fund realizes  on the  sale of the
security will be reduced by  the premium paid for,  and the commissions paid  in
connection  with, the  put option. The  Fund may  also purchase a  put option to
cover a put option it has written.

  The Fund may wish to protect certain portfolio securities against a decline in
market value at a time when put  options on those particular securities are  not
available  for  purchase.  The  Fund  may therefore  purchase  a  put  option on
securities other than those it  wishes to protect even  though it does not  hold
such  other securities in its  portfolio. While changes in  the value of the put
option should generally  offset changes  in the  value of  the securities  being
hedged,  the correlation  between the two  values may  not be as  close in these
transactions as in transactions in which the  Fund purchases a put option on  an
underlying security it owns.

  THE  FUND WILL NOT PURCHASE  AN OPTION ON U.S.  GOVERNMENT SECURITIES IF, AS A
RESULT OF SUCH PURCHASE, MORE THAN 20% OF ITS TOTAL ASSETS WOULD BE INVESTED  IN
PREMIUMS FOR SUCH OPTIONS AND ON OPTIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS ON U.S. GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES.

  OTHER CONSIDERATIONS

  ALL  OPTIONS PURCHASED OR SOLD BY THE FUND WILL BE TRADED ON A U.S. SECURITIES
EXCHANGE OR WILL BE PURCHASED OR SOLD BY A PRIMARY GOVERNMENT SECURITIES  DEALER
RECOGNIZED  BY  THE  FEDERAL  RESERVE  BANK OF  NEW  YORK  (OTC  OPTIONS). While
exchange-traded options  are  in  effect  guaranteed  by  the  Options  Clearing
Corporation,  the Fund relies on the dealer from whom it purchases an OTC option
to perform if  the option is  exercised. Failure by  the dealer to  do so  would
result  in the loss of premium paid by the  Fund as well as loss of the expected
benefit of the transaction.

  Exchange-traded options generally  have a continuous  liquid market while  OTC
options  may not. Consequently, the  Fund will generally be  able to realize the
value of an OTC option it has purchased only by exercising it or reselling it to
the dealer who  issued it. Similarly,  when the  Fund writes an  OTC option,  it
generally  will be able to close out the OTC option prior to its expiration only
by entering into  a closing purchase  transaction with the  dealer to which  the
Fund originally wrote the OTC option. While the Fund will seek to enter into OTC
options only with dealers who will agree to and which are expected to be capable
of  entering into closing transactions with the  Fund, there can be no assurance
that the Fund will be  able to liquidate an OTC  option at a favorable price  at
any  time prior  to expiration.  Until the  Fund, as  a covered  OTC call option
writer, is able to effect a closing purchase transaction, it will not be able to
liquidate securities used as cover until the option expires, is exercised or the
Fund provides substitute cover. In the event of insolvency of the contra  party,
the  Fund may  be unable  to liquidate  an OTC  option. With  respect to options
written by  the Fund,  the inability  to enter  into a  closing transaction  may
result in material losses to the Fund. For example, since the Fund must maintain
a  covered position with respect to any call option on a security it writes, the
Fund may be limited in its ability to sell

                                       11
<PAGE>
the underlying security while it is obligated under an option. This  requirement
may impair the Fund's ability to sell a portfolio security at a time when such a
sale might be advantageous.

  The  Fund's investment adviser  monitors the creditworthiness  of dealers with
whom the Fund enters  into OTC option transactions  under the Trustees'  general
supervision.  The Fund's ability to enter  into options contracts may be limited
by the Internal Revenue  Code's requirements for  qualification as a  registered
investment company. See "Additional Investment Information--Options Transactions
and Related Risks" in the Statement of Additional Information.

  TRANSACTIONS IN FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS THEREON

  THE FUND MAY PURCHASE AND SELL FINANCIAL FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS THEREON
WHICH  ARE  TRADED ON  A  COMMODITIES EXCHANGE  OR  BOARD OF  TRADE  FOR CERTAIN
HEDGING, RETURN  ENHANCEMENT AND  RISK MANAGEMENT  PURPOSES IN  ACCORDANCE  WITH
REGULATIONS  OF THE COMMODITY  FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION  (CFTC). THESE FUTURES
CONTRACTS AND RELATED  OPTIONS WILL  BE ON DEBT  SECURITIES, FINANCIAL  INDICES,
U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, FOREIGN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES AND FOREIGN CURRENCIES
AND  INCLUDE  FUTURES  CONTRACTS AND  OPTIONS  WHICH  ARE LINKED  TO  THE LONDON
INTERBANK OFFERED RATE (LIBOR). A futures  contract is an agreement to  purchase
or  sell an agreed amount of  such securities at a set  price for delivery on an
agreed future date. The Fund may purchase a futures contract as a hedge  against
an  anticipated  decline in  interest rates,  and  resulting increase  in market
price, in securities the Fund  intends to acquire. The  Fund may sell a  futures
contract  as  a hedge  against an  anticipated increase  in interest  rates, and
resulting decline in market price, in securities the Fund owns.

  THE FUND  MAY ALSO  PURCHASE AND  WRITE (I.E.,  SELL) "COVERED"  PUT AND  CALL
OPTIONS  ON FUTURES CONTRACTS  THAT ARE TRADED ON  U.S. COMMODITY EXCHANGES. The
Fund will write options on futures contracts for hedging purposes as well as  to
realize  through the receipt  of premium income  a greater return  than would be
realized on  the Fund's  portfolio  securities alone.  An  option on  a  futures
contract  gives the  purchaser the  right, in  return for  the premium  paid, to
assume a position in a futures contract (a long position if the option is a call
and a short position if  the option is a put)  at a specified exercise price  at
any time during the option exercise period. The writer of the option is required
upon  exercise to assume an offsetting futures position (a short position if the
option is a call and a long position  if the option is a put). Upon exercise  of
the  option, the  assumption of offsetting  futures positions by  the writer and
holder of the  option will be  accompanied by delivery  of the accumulated  cash
balance  in the writer's  futures margin account which  represents the amount by
which the market  price of the  futures contract, at  exercise, exceeds, in  the
case of a call, or is less than, in the case of a put, the exercise price of the
option   on  the  futures  contract.  The  Fund  may  also  enter  into  closing
transactions with respect to futures contracts and options thereon to  terminate
existing positions.

  THE  FUND MAY ALSO FROM TIME TO TIME PURCHASE EURODOLLAR INSTRUMENTS TRADED ON
THE CHICAGO  MERCANTILE EXCHANGE.  EURODOLLAR INSTRUMENTS  ARE ESSENTIALLY  U.S.
DOLLAR-DENOMINATED  FUTURES  CONTRACTS OR  OPTIONS THEREON  WHICH ARE  LINKED TO
LIBOR. Eurodollar futures contracts enable purchasers to obtain a fixed rate for
the lending of funds and sellers to obtain a fixed rate for borrowings. The Fund
intends to use Eurodollar futures contracts and options thereon to hedge against
changes in LIBOR, to which many interest rate swaps are linked. The use of these
instruments is subject to the same limitations and risks as those applicable  to
the use of interest rate futures contracts and options thereon.

  THE  FUND WILL ENGAGE IN TRANSACTIONS IN FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS THEREON
ONLY FOR BONA FIDE HEDGING, YIELD  ENHANCEMENT AND RISK MANAGEMENT PURPOSES,  IN
EACH  CASE IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE CFTC, AND NOT FOR
SPECULATION.

  As an alternative to BONA  FIDE hedging as defined by  the CFTC, the Fund  may
comply  with  a different  standard established  by CFTC  rules with  respect to
futures contracts and options  thereon purchased by the  Fund incidental to  the
Fund's activities in the securities markets, under which the value of the assets
underlying  such positions will not  exceed the sum of (i)  cash set aside in an
identifiable   manner   or   short-term   U.S.   Government   or   other    U.S.
dollar-denominated high-grade short-term debt securities

                                       12
<PAGE>
segregated  for this  purpose, (ii)  cash proceeds  on existing  investments due
within thirty days, and (iii) accrued profits on the particular futures contract
or option thereon.

  THE FUND WILL NOT  ENTER INTO FUTURES CONTRACTS  OR RELATED OPTIONS FOR  YIELD
ENHANCEMENT  AND RISK MANAGEMENT PURPOSES FOR WHICH THE AGGREGATE INITIAL MARGIN
AND PREMIUMS EXCEED 5% OF THE LIQUIDATION VALUE OF THE FUND'S TOTAL ASSETS AFTER
TAKING INTO  ACCOUNT  UNREALIZED  PROFITS  AND UNREALIZED  LOSSES  ON  ANY  SUCH
CONTRACTS  THE FUND HAS ENTERED INTO; PROVIDED,  HOWEVER, THAT IN THE CASE OF AN
OPTION THAT IS IN-THE-MONEY AT THE TIME OF PURCHASE, THE IN-THE-MONEY AMOUNT MAY
BE EXCLUDED  IN  COMPUTING SUCH  5%.  THE FUND  MAY  PURCHASE AND  SELL  FUTURES
CONTRACTS  OR  RELATED  OPTIONS,  WITHOUT  LIMITATION,  FOR  BONA  FIDE  HEDGING
PURPOSES. THE FUND'S ABILITY TO ENTER INTO TRANSACTIONS IN FUTURES CONTRACTS AND
OPTIONS THEREON MAY BE LIMITED BY  THE INTERNAL REVENUE CODE'S REQUIREMENTS  FOR
QUALIFICATION AS A REGULATED INVESTMENT COMPANY. See "Taxes" in the Statement of
Additional   Information.  Except  as  described   above,  there  are  no  other
restrictions on  the  Fund's  ability  to enter  into  transactions  in  futures
contracts and options thereon.

  RISK CONSIDERATIONS

  CERTAIN  RISKS ARE INHERENT IN THE FUND'S USE OF FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS
ON FUTURES. One such  risk arises because the  correlation between movements  in
the  price of futures and movements in the price of the debt securities that are
the subject of the hedge will not be perfect. Another risk is that the movements
in the price of futures contracts or  options on futures may not move  inversely
with  changes in interest rates. If the Fund has sold futures contracts to hedge
securities held by the Fund and the value of the futures position declines  more
than the price of such securities increases, the Fund will realize a loss on the
futures  contracts which  is not  completely offset  by the  appreciation in the
price of the hedged securities. Similarly, if  the Fund has written a call on  a
futures  contract and the value of the  call increases by more than the increase
in the value of the securities held as cover, the Fund may realize a loss on the
call which is  not completely offset  by the  appreciation in the  price of  the
securities held as cover and the premium received for writing the call.

  The  Fund's ability to establish and  close out positions in futures contracts
and options on futures contracts  will be subject to  the existence of a  liquid
secondary  market. Although the Fund generally  will purchase or sell only those
futures contracts and options  thereon for which there  appears to be an  active
secondary  market, there is  no assurance that  a liquid secondary  market on an
exchange will exist  for any  particular futures contract  or option  or at  any
particular  time. In the  event no such  market exists for  a particular futures
contract or option thereon in which the  Fund maintains a position, it will  not
be  possible to effect a closing transaction in that contract and the Fund would
have to either make or take delivery under the futures contract, or in the  case
of  a written option,  wait to sell  the underlying securities  until the option
expires or is exercised.  In the case  of a futures contract  which the Fund  is
unable  to close, the Fund would be  required to maintain margin deposits on the
contract and to make variation margin payments until the contract is closed.

  Successful use of futures contracts and options thereon by the Fund is subject
to the ability of the Fund's  investment adviser to predict correctly  movements
in  the direction  of interest  rates and  securities prices.  If the investment
adviser's expectations are not met, the Fund  would be in a worse position  than
if  a  hedging  strategy  had  not  been  pursued.  Certain  skills  required to
successfully use futures contracts or  related options are different from  those
required  to select portfolio securities.  The Fund's investment adviser advises
other investment  companies which  invest  in futures  contracts for  BONA  FIDE
hedging.

  Exchanges  on  which futures  contracts are  traded may  impose limits  on the
positions that the  Fund may take  in certain circumstances.  In addition,  some
futures  markets have daily limits on  market price movements of certain futures
contracts.

  See "Additional Investment Information--Futures  Contracts on U.S.  Government
Securities" in the Statement of Additional Information.

                                       13
<PAGE>
  REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS

  The  Fund may on occasion enter into repurchase agreements, whereby the seller
of a security agrees  to repurchase that  security from the  Fund at a  mutually
agreed-upon  time and price. The repurchase date  is usually within a day or two
of the original purchase, although  it may extend over  a number of months.  The
resale  price is in excess of the purchase price, reflecting an agreed-upon rate
of return effective for the period of  time the Fund's money is invested in  the
security.   The  Fund's  repurchase  agreements  will  at  all  times  be  fully
collateralized in  an amount  at least  equal to  the purchase  price  including
accrued  interest earned on  the underlying securities.  The instruments held as
collateral are valued daily, and as the value of instruments declines, the  Fund
will  require additional collateral. If the seller defaults and the value of the
collateral securing  the repurchase  agreement declines,  the Fund  may incur  a
loss.  The Fund participates in a joint repurchase account with other investment
companies managed  by Prudential  Mutual Fund  Management, Inc.  pursuant to  an
order of the SEC. See "Additional Investment Information--Repurchase Agreements"
in the Statement of Additional Information.

  REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS AND DOLLAR ROLLS

  The  Fund may enter  into reverse repurchase agreements  and dollar rolls. The
proceeds from such transactions will be  used for the clearance of  transactions
or to take advantage of investment opportunities.

  Reverse  repurchase  agreements  involve  sales  by  the  Fund  of  securities
concurrently with an agreement by  the Fund to repurchase  the same assets at  a
later date at a fixed price. During the reverse repurchase agreement period, the
Fund continues to receive principal and interest payments on these securities.

  Dollar  rolls involve  sales by  the Fund  of securities  for delivery  in the
current month and  a simultaneous contract  to repurchase substantially  similar
(same  type and  coupon) securities  on a  specified future  date from  the same
party. During the roll period, the  Fund forgoes principal and interest paid  on
the  securities. The Fund  is compensated by the  difference between the current
sales price and the forward price for the future purchase (often referred to  as
the  "drop") as  well as  by the  interest earned  on the  cash proceeds  of the
initial sale. A "covered roll" is a specific type of dollar roll for which there
is an offsetting  cash position  or a  cash equivalent  security position  which
matures on or before the forward settlement date of the dollar roll transaction.

  The  Fund will establish a  segregated account with its  Custodian in which it
will maintain cash, U.S. Government  securities or other liquid high-grade  debt
obligations  equal in value to its  obligations in respect of reverse repurchase
agreements and  dollar rolls.  Reverse repurchase  agreements and  dollar  rolls
involve  the risk that the  market value of the  securities retained by the Fund
may decline below the price of the securities the Fund has sold but is obligated
to repurchase under the agreement. In the event the buyer of securities under  a
reverse  repurchase agreement  or dollar  roll files  for bankruptcy  or becomes
insolvent, the Fund's  use of the  proceeds of the  agreement may be  restricted
pending  a determination by the other party, or its trustee or receiver, whether
to enforce the Fund's obligation to repurchase the securities.

  Reverse repurchase  agreements  and  dollar rolls,  including  covered  dollar
rolls,   are  speculative  techniques  involving  leverage  and  are  considered
borrowings by the Fund for purposes of the percentage limitations applicable  to
borrowings. See "Borrowing" below.

  SECURITIES LENDING

  The  Fund may lend  its portfolio securities  to brokers or  dealers, banks or
other recognized  institutional  borrowers  of  securities,  provided  that  the
borrower  at  all times  maintains cash  or equivalent  collateral or  secures a
letter of credit in favor of the Fund in an amount equal to at least 100% of the
market value of the securities loaned. During the time portfolio securities  are
on  loan, the borrower will pay the Fund an amount equivalent to any dividend or
interest paid on such securities and the Fund may invest the cash collateral and
earn additional income,  or it  may receive  an agreed-upon  amount of  interest
income  from the borrower.  As a matter  of fundamental policy,  the Fund cannot
lend more than 30% of the value of its total assets.

                                       14
<PAGE>
  WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES

  The Fund may purchase or sell securities on a when-issued or delayed  delivery
basis.  When-issued or delayed  delivery transactions arise  when securities are
purchased or sold  by the Fund  with payment  and delivery taking  place in  the
future  in order to  secure what is  considered to be  an advantageous price and
yield to the  Fund at  the time  of entering  into the  transaction. The  Fund's
Custodian  will  maintain,  in a  segregated  account  of the  Fund,  cash, U.S.
Government securities or other liquid high-grade debt obligations having a value
equal to or  greater than the  Fund's purchase commitments;  the Custodian  will
likewise  segregate securities sold on a  delayed delivery basis. The securities
so purchased are subject  to market fluctuation and  no interest accrues to  the
purchaser  during the  period between  purchase and  settlement. At  the time of
delivery of the  securities, the value  may be  more or less  than the  purchase
price  and an increase in  the percentage of the  Fund's assets committed to the
purchase of securities on a when-issued  or delayed delivery basis may  increase
the volatility of the Fund's net asset value.

  BORROWING

  The  Fund  may  borrow money  up  to 20%  of  the  value of  its  total assets
(calculated when the  loan is made)  from banks for  temporary extraordinary  or
emergency  purposes or for the clearance of transactions. The Fund may pledge up
to 20% of its total assets to secure these borrowings.

OTHER INVESTMENT INFORMATION

  The Fund is  permitted to  purchase the following  securities and  to use  the
following  investment techniques,  although it does  not anticipate  that any of
them will constitute a significant component of its investment program.

  SHORT SALES AGAINST-THE-BOX

  The Fund may  make short sales  against-the-box for the  purpose of  deferring
realization  of  gain or  loss for  federal  income tax  purposes. A  short sale
"against-the-box" is a short sale in which the Fund owns an equal amount of  the
securities  sold short or  securities convertible into  or exchangeable, without
payment of any further consideration, for  securities of the same issue as,  and
equal in amount to, the securities sold short. The Fund may engage in such short
sales  only  to the  extent that  not more  than  10% of  the Fund's  net assets
(determined at the  time of  the short  sale) are  held as  collateral for  such
sales.

  INTEREST RATE SWAPS

  The  Fund may enter into interest rate  swaps. Interest rate swaps involve the
exchange by the Fund with another  party of their respective commitments to  pay
or  receive interest, E.G., an exchange of floating rate payments for fixed-rate
payments. The  Fund  expects  to  enter into  these  transactions  primarily  to
preserve  a  return or  spread  on a  particular  investment or  portion  of its
portfolio or to protect against any increase in the price of securities the Fund
anticipates  purchasing  at  a  later  date.  The  Fund  intends  to  use  these
transactions as a hedge and not as a speculative investment.

  See  "Additional  Investment Information--Interest  Rate Transactions"  in the
Statement of Additional Information.

  ILLIQUID SECURITIES

  The Fund  may invest  up to  15% of  its net  assets in  illiquid  securities,
including repurchase agreements which have a maturity of longer than seven days,
securities   with  legal  or  contractual  restrictions  on  resale  (restricted
securities)  and  securities  that   are  not  readily  marketable.   Restricted
securities eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of
1933,  as amended  (the Securities Act),  and privately  placed commercial paper
that have a readily available market are not considered illiquid for purposes of
this limitation.  The investment  adviser  will monitor  the liquidity  of  such
restricted   securities  under  the  supervision  of  the  Board  of  Directors.
Repurchase agreements subject to demand are  deemed to have a maturity equal  to
the applicable notice period.

                                       15
<PAGE>
  The  staff of the  SEC has taken the  position that purchased over-the-counter
options and the assets used as "cover" for written over-the-counter options  are
illiquid  securities unless the Fund and  the counterparty have provided for the
Fund, at  the  Fund's  election,  to unwind  the  over-the-counter  option.  The
exercise  of such an option ordinarily would  involve the payment by the Fund of
an amount designed  to reflect the  counterparty's economic loss  from an  early
termination,  but does  allow the Fund  to treat  the assets used  as "cover" as
"liquid."

  When the Fund enters into interest rate  swaps on other than a net basis,  the
entire  amount of the Fund's obligations, if  any, with respect to such interest
rate swaps will be treated as illiquid. To the extent that the Fund enters  into
interest rate swaps on a net basis, the net amount of the excess, if any, of the
Fund's obligations over its entitlements with respect to each interest rate swap
will  be treated as illiquid.  The Fund will also  treat non-U.S. Government POs
and IOs as illiquid  securities so long  as the staff of  the SEC maintains  its
position that such securities are illiquid.

  PORTFOLIO TURNOVER

  For  the years ended October 31, 1993 and October 31, 1992, the turnover rates
of the Fund's portfolio were 66% and 66%, respectively. Based on its  experience
in  managing similar investment  products, the investment  adviser expects that,
under normal circumstances, the Fund's portfolio turnover rate may exceed  200%.
High  portfolio  turnover  rate may  involve  correspondingly  greater brokerage
commissions  and  other  transaction  costs.  See  "Portfolio  Transactions  and
Brokerage" in the Statement of Additional Information.

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

  The  Fund  is  subject  to certain  investment  restrictions  which,  like its
investment objective,  constitute  fundamental  policies.  Fundamental  policies
cannot  be changed  without the  approval of  the holders  of a  majority of the
Fund's outstanding voting securities, as defined in the Investment Company  Act.
See "Investment Restrictions" in the Statement of Additional Information.

                            HOW THE FUND IS MANAGED

  THE  TRUSTEES OF THE FUND, IN ADDITION TO OVERSEEING THE ACTIONS OF THE FUND'S
MANAGER, SUBADVISER AND DISTRIBUTOR, AS SET FORTH BELOW, DECIDE UPON MATTERS  OF
GENERAL  POLICY. THE FUND'S  MANAGER CONDUCTS AND  SUPERVISES THE DAILY BUSINESS
OPERATIONS OF  THE  FUND.  THE  FUND'S  SUBADVISER  FURNISHES  DAILY  INVESTMENT
ADVISORY SERVICES.

  For  the fiscal year  ended October 31,  1993, the Fund's  total expenses as a
percentage of average net assets for the Fund's Class A and Class B shares  were
.96% and 1.81%, respectively. See "Financial Highlights." No Class C shares were
outstanding during the fiscal year ended October 31, 1993.

MANAGER

  PRUDENTIAL  MUTUAL FUND  MANAGEMENT, INC.  (PMF OR  THE MANAGER),  ONE SEAPORT
PLAZA, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10292, IS  THE MANAGER OF THE FUND AND IS  COMPENSATED
FOR  ITS SERVICES AT AN ANNUAL RATE OF .50 OF 1% OF THE FUND'S AVERAGE DAILY NET
ASSETS. It was incorporated in May 1987 under the laws of the State of Delaware.
For the fiscal year ended October 31, 1993, the Fund paid management fees to PMF
of .50% of the Fund's average net assets.

  As of June  30, 1994,  PMF served  as the  manager to  37 open-end  investment
companies,  constituting all of  the Prudential Mutual Funds,  and as manager or
administrator to 29  closed-end investment  companies with  aggregate assets  of
approximately $47 billion.

  UNDER  THE  MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT  WITH THE  FUND,  PMF MANAGES  THE INVESTMENT
OPERATIONS OF THE FUND  AND ALSO ADMINISTERS THE  FUND'S CORPORATE AFFAIRS.  SEE
"MANAGER" IN THE STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.

                                       16
<PAGE>
  UNDER  THE  SUBADVISORY AGREEMENT  BETWEEN PMF  AND THE  PRUDENTIAL INVESTMENT
CORPORATION (PIC OR THE SUBADVISER), PIC FURNISHES INVESTMENT ADVISORY  SERVICES
IN  CONNECTION WITH THE MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND  AND IS REIMBURSED BY PMF FOR ITS
REASONABLE COSTS AND  EXPENSES INCURRED  IN PROVIDING SUCH  SERVICES. Under  the
Management  Agreement, PMF continues  to have responsibility  for all investment
advisory services and supervises PIC's performance of such services.

  The current  portfolio manager  of  the Fund  is  Annamarie Carlucci,  a  Vice
President of Prudential Investment Advisors, a unit of The Prudential Investment
Corporation (PIC). Ms. Carlucci has responsibility for the day-to-day management
of  the Fund's  portfolio. Ms. Carlucci  has managed the  Fund's portfolio since
January 1991 and has been employed by PIC as a portfolio manager since 1988. Ms.
Carlucci also  serves as  the  portfolio manager  of the  Prudential  Structured
Maturity   Fund,  Prudential   Series  Fund   Government  Securities  Portfolio,
Prudential Series Fund  Bond Portfolio  and Prudential Series  Fund Zero  Coupon
Portfolios.

  PMF  and PIC are wholly-owned subsidiaries of The Prudential Insurance Company
of America (Prudential),  a major diversified  insurance and financial  services
company.

DISTRIBUTOR

  PRUDENTIAL MUTUAL FUND DISTRIBUTORS, INC. (PMFD), ONE SEAPORT PLAZA, NEW YORK,
NEW  YORK  10292, IS  A CORPORATION  ORGANIZED UNDER  THE LAWS  OF THE  STATE OF
DELAWARE AND SERVES AS THE DISTRIBUTOR OF THE CLASS A SHARES OF THE FUND. IT  IS
A WHOLLY-OWNED SUBSIDIARY OF PMF.

  PRUDENTIAL  SECURITIES  INCORPORATED, ONE  SEAPORT PLAZA,  NEW YORK,  NEW YORK
10292 (PRUDENTIAL SECURITIES OR PSI), IS A CORPORATION ORGANIZED UNDER THE  LAWS
OF  THE STATE OF DELAWARE AND SERVES AS THE DISTRIBUTOR OF THE CLASS B AND CLASS
C SHARES OF THE FUND. IT IS AN INDIRECT, WHOLLY-OWNED SUBSIDIARY OF PRUDENTIAL.

  UNDER SEPARATE DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLANS  (THE CLASS A PLAN, THE CLASS  B
PLAN  AND THE CLASS C  PLAN, COLLECTIVELY, THE PLANS)  ADOPTED BY THE FUND UNDER
RULE 12B-1 UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT AND SEPARATE DISTRIBUTION AGREEMENTS
(THE DISTRIBUTION AGREEMENTS), PMFD AND PRUDENTIAL SECURITIES (COLLECTIVELY, THE
DISTRIBUTOR) INCUR THE EXPENSES OF DISTRIBUTING THE FUND'S CLASS A, CLASS B  AND
CLASS  C SHARES. These  expenses include commissions  and account servicing fees
paid to,  or on  account of,  financial advisers  of Prudential  Securities  and
representatives   of  Pruco  Securities   Corporation  (Prusec),  an  affiliated
broker-dealer, commissions and account servicing fees paid to, or on account of,
other broker-dealers or financial institutions (other than national banks) which
have entered into  agreements with  the Distributor,  advertising expenses,  the
cost  of printing and  mailing prospectuses to  potential investors and indirect
and overhead costs of Prudential Securities and Prusec associated with the  sale
of  Fund shares,  including lease,  utility, communications  and sales promotion
expenses. The State of  Texas requires that  shares of the Fund  may be sold  in
that  state only by dealers or other financial institutions which are registered
there as broker-dealers.

  Under the Plans, the Fund is obligated to pay distribution and/or service fees
to the Distributor as compensation for its distribution and service  activities,
not  as  reimbursement  for  specific expenses  incurred.  If  the Distributor's
expenses exceed  its  distribution  and  service fees,  the  Fund  will  not  be
obligated to pay any additional expenses. If the Distributor's expenses are less
than  such  distribution and  service fees,  it  will retain  its full  fees and
realize a profit.

  UNDER THE CLASS  A PLAN, THE  FUND MAY PAY  PMFD FOR ITS  DISTRIBUTION-RELATED
ACTIVITIES  WITH RESPECT TO CLASS A SHARES AT AN  ANNUAL RATE OF UP TO .30 OF 1%
OF THE AVERAGE DAILY NET ASSETS OF THE CLASS A SHARES. The Class A Plan provides
that (i) up to .25 of 1% of the  average daily net assets of the Class A  shares
may  be used to pay for personal  service and/ or the maintenance of shareholder
accounts (service fee) and (ii)  total distribution fees (including the  service
fee  of .25 of 1%) may  not exceed .30 of 1% of  the average daily net assets of
the Class  A shares.  PMFD has  agreed to  limit its  distribution-related  fees
payable  under the Class A Plan to .15 of  1% of the average daily net assets of
the Class A shares for the fiscal year ending October 31, 1994.

                                       17
<PAGE>
  For the fiscal year ended October  31, 1993, PMFD received payments of  $9,508
under  the  Class A  Plan. This  amount  was primarily  expended for  payment of
account servicing fees to financial advisers and other persons who sell Class  A
shares.  For  the  fiscal  year  ended  October  31,  1993,  PMFD  also received
approximately $107,100 in initial sales charges.

  UNDER THE CLASS B AND  CLASS C PLANS, THE  FUND MAY PAY PRUDENTIAL  SECURITIES
FOR  ITS DISTRIBUTION-RELATED  ACTIVITIES WITH  RESPECT TO  CLASS B  AND CLASS C
SHARES AT AN ANNUAL  RATE OF UP  TO 1% OF  THE AVERAGE DAILY  NET ASSETS OF  THE
CLASS  B AND  CLASS C SHARES,  RESPECTIVELY. The  Class B Plan  provides for the
payment to Prudential Securities of (i) an asset-based sales charge of up to .75
of 1% of the average daily net assets of the Class B shares, and (ii) a  service
fee  of up to .25 of  1% of the average daily net  assets of the Class B shares.
The Class C Plan  provides for the  payment to Prudential  Securities of (i)  an
asset-based  sales charge of up to .75 of  1% of the average daily net assets of
the Class C shares, and  (ii) a service fee  of up to .25  of 1% of the  average
daily  net assets  of the Class  C shares.  The service fee  is used  to pay for
personal service  and/or the  maintenance  of shareholder  accounts.  Prudential
Securities  has agreed to limit its distribution-related fees payable; under the
Class B Plan, to .85 of 1% of the average daily net assets of the Class B shares
and; under the Class C Plan,  .75 of 1% of the  average daily net assets of  the
Class  C  shares  for  the  fiscal  year  ending  October  31,  1994. Prudential
Securities  also  receives  contingent  deferred  sales  charges  from   certain
redeeming    shareholders.   See   "Shareholder    Guide--How   to   Sell   Your
Shares--Contingent Deferred Sales Charges."

  For the fiscal  year ended  October 31, 1993,  Prudential Securities  incurred
distribution  expenses of  approximately $2,036,000 under  the Class  B Plan and
received $1,621,067  from the  Fund under  the Class  B Plan  and  approximately
$423,200 in contingent deferred sales charges from redemptions of Class B shares
during  this period. No Class  C shares were outstanding  during the fiscal year
ending October 31, 1993.

  For fiscal year ended October 31, 1993, the Fund paid distribution expenses of
.15% and 1% of the average daily net  assets of the Class A and Class B  shares,
respectively.  The Fund records all payments made under the Plans as expenses in
the calculation of  net investment income.  No Class C  shares were  outstanding
during  the  fiscal year  ended  October 31,  1993. Prior  to  the date  of this
Prospectus, the Class A and Class B Plans operated as "reimbursement type" plans
and, in the  case of  Class B, provided  for the  reimbursement of  distribution
expenses incurred in current and prior years. See "Distributor" in the Statement
of Additional Information.

  Distribution  expenses attributable to the sale of  shares of the Fund will be
allocated to each class based upon the ratio of sales of each class to the sales
of all shares of the Fund other  than expenses allocable to a particular  class.
The distribution fee and sales charge of one class will not be used to subsidize
the sale of another class.

  Each Plan provides that it shall continue in effect from year to year provided
that  a  majority of  the  Trustees of  the Fund,  including  a majority  of the
Trustees who  are  not "interested  persons"  of the  Fund  (as defined  in  the
Investment Company Act) and who have no direct or indirect financial interest in
the  operation of the Plan or any agreement  related to the Plan (the Rule 12b-1
Trustees), vote annually to  continue the Plan. Each  Plan may be terminated  at
any  time by vote of a  majority of the Rule 12b-1  Trustees or of a majority of
the outstanding shares of the applicable class of the Fund. The Fund will not be
obligated to pay expenses  incurred under any  plan if it  is terminated or  not
continued.

  In  addition to distribution and service fees paid by the Fund under the Class
A, Class B and Class  C Plans, the Manager (or  one of its affiliates) may  make
payments  out of its own  resources to dealers and  other persons who distribute
shares of the  Fund. Such payments  may be  calculated by reference  to the  net
asset value of the shares sold by such persons or otherwise.

  The  Distributor  is  subject to  the  rules  of the  National  Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc., governing maximum sales charges. See "Distributor"  in
the Statement of Additional Information.

                                       18
<PAGE>
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

  Prudential  Securities may act as a  broker and/or futures commission merchant
for the  Fund, provided  that the  commissions, fees  or other  remuneration  it
receives  are reasonable and fair. See "Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage" in
the Statement of Additional Information.

CUSTODIAN AND TRANSFER AND DIVIDEND DISBURSING AGENT

  State Street  Bank  and  Trust  Company, One  Heritage  Drive,  North  Quincy,
Massachusetts 02121, serves as Custodian for the Fund's portfolio securities and
cash and, in that capacity, maintains certain financial and accounting books and
records  pursuant to an agreement with the Fund. Its mailing address is P.O. Box
1713, Boston, Massachusetts 02105.

  Prudential Mutual Fund Services, Inc.,  Raritan Plaza One, Edison, New  Jersey
08837,  serves  as Transfer  Agent and  Dividend Disbursing  Agent and  in those
capacities maintains  certain  books  and  records  for  the  Fund.  PMFS  is  a
wholly-owned  subsidiary  of PMF.  Its mailing  address is  P.O. Box  15005, New
Brunswick, New Jersey 08906-5005.

                         HOW THE FUND VALUES ITS SHARES

  THE FUND'S NET ASSET VALUE OR NAV  PER SHARE IS DETERMINED BY SUBTRACTING  ITS
LIABILITIES  FROM THE  VALUE OF  ITS ASSETS, AND  DIVIDING THE  REMAINDER BY THE
NUMBER OF OUTSTANDING SHARES OF THE FUND. NAV IS CALCULATED SEPARATELY FOR  EACH
CLASS.  THE TRUSTEES HAVE FIXED THE SPECIFIC  TIME OF DAY FOR THE COMPUTATION OF
THE FUND'S NAV TO BE AS OF 4:15 P.M., NEW YORK TIME.

  Portfolio securities are valued based on market quotations or, if not  readily
available,   at  fair  value  as  determined  in  good  faith  under  procedures
established by the Fund's  Trustees. See "Net Asset  Value" in the Statement  of
Additional Information.

  The  Fund will  compute its  NAV once daily  on days  that the  New York Stock
Exchange is open for trading except on days on which no orders to purchase, sell
or redeem shares have been received by the Fund or days on which changes in  the
value  of the Fund's portfolio securities do  not materially affect the NAV. The
New York Stock  Exchange is closed  on the following  holidays: New Year's  Day,
Presidents'  Day,  Good  Friday,  Memorial  Day,  Independence  Day,  Labor Day,
Thanksgiving Day and Christmas  Day. See "Net Asset  Value" in the Statement  of
Additional Information.

  Although the legal rights of each class of shares are substantially identical,
the  different expenses borne  by each class  will result in  different NAVs and
dividends. As long as the Fund declares dividends daily, the NAV of the Class A,
Class B and Class C shares will generally be the same. It is expected,  however,
that  the  Fund's  dividends will  differ  by  approximately the  amount  of the
distribution-related expense accrual differential among the classes.

                      HOW THE FUND CALCULATES PERFORMANCE

  FROM TIME  TO TIME  THE FUND  MAY  ADVERTISE ITS  "YIELD" AND  "TOTAL  RETURN"
(INCLUDING  "AVERAGE  ANNUAL"  TOTAL  RETURN AND  "AGGREGATE"  TOTAL  RETURN) IN
ADVERTISEMENTS AND SALES LITERATURE. "YIELD"  AND "TOTAL RETURN" ARE  CALCULATED
SEPARATELY  FOR CLASS A, CLASS B AND CLASS  C SHARES. THESE FIGURES ARE BASED ON
HISTORICAL EARNINGS AND  ARE NOT  INTENDED TO INDICATE  FUTURE PERFORMANCE.  The
"yield"  refers to  the income  generated by  an investment  in the  Fund over a
one-month or  30-day period.  This income  is then  "annualized," that  is,  the
amount  of  income generated  by  the investment  during  that 30-day  period is
assumed to be generated each 30-day period for twelve periods and is shown as  a
percentage  of  the investment.  The  income earned  on  the investment  is also
assumed to be  reinvested at  the end  of the  sixth 30-day  period. The  "total
return" shows how

                                       19
<PAGE>
much an investment in the Fund would have increased (decreased) over a specified
period  of time (I.E.,  one, five or ten  years or since  inception of the Fund)
assuming that all distributions and dividends by the Fund were reinvested on the
reinvestment  dates  during  the  period  and  less  all  recurring  fees.   The
"aggregate"  total return  reflects actual performance  over a  stated period of
time. "Average annual" total  return is a hypothetical  rate of return that,  if
achieved  annually,  would  have produced  the  same aggregate  total  return if
performance had been  constant over  the entire period.  "Average annual"  total
return  smooths  out  variations  in  performance  and  takes  into  account any
applicable initial  or  contingent  deferred  sales  charges.  Neither  "average
annual" total return nor "aggregate" total return takes into account any federal
or  state income taxes which  may be payable upon  redemption. The Fund also may
include comparative performance  information in advertising  or marketing.  Such
performance  information may include data from Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.,
Morningstar  Publications,   Inc.,   other   industry   publications,   business
periodicals  and market indices. See  "Performance Information" in the Statement
of Additional Information. The Fund will include performance data for each class
of shares of the Fund in any advertisement or information including  performance
data  of the  Fund. Further performance  information is contained  in the Fund's
annual and semi-annual reports  to shareholders, which  may be obtained  without
charge. See "Shareholder Guide--Shareholder Services--Reports to Shareholders."

                       TAXES, DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

TAXATION OF THE FUND

  THE FUND HAS ELECTED TO QUALIFY AND INTENDS TO REMAIN QUALIFIED AS A REGULATED
INVESTMENT  COMPANY UNDER THE INTERNAL REVENUE  CODE. ACCORDINGLY, THE FUND WILL
NOT BE SUBJECT TO FEDERAL INCOME TAXES ON ITS NET INVESTMENT INCOME AND  CAPITAL
GAINS,  IF ANY,  THAT IT  DISTRIBUTES TO  ITS SHAREHOLDERS.  See "Taxes"  in the
Statement of Additional Information.

TAXATION OF SHAREHOLDERS

  All dividends out  of net  investment income, together  with distributions  of
short-term  capital gains, will be taxable as ordinary income to the shareholder
whether or not reinvested. Any net long-term capital gains (I.E., the excess  of
net  long-term capital gains over net  short-term capital losses) distributed to
shareholders will  be  taxable as  such  to  the shareholders,  whether  or  not
reinvested  and regardless of the length of  time a shareholder has owned his or
her shares. The maximum long-term capital gains rate for individuals is 28%. The
maximum long-term capital gains rate for corporate shareholders is currently 35%
and is the same as the maximum corporate tax rate for ordinary income.

  The Fund has obtained opinions of counsel  to the effect that neither (i)  the
conversion  of Class B shares into Class A shares nor (ii) the exchange of Class
B or Class C shares for Class  A shares constitutes a taxable event for  federal
income  tax purposes.  However, such  opinions are  not binding  on the Internal
Revenue Service.

  Shareholders are advised to consult their own tax advisers regarding  specific
questions  as to federal, state or local  taxes. See "Taxes" in the Statement of
Additional Information.

WITHHOLDING TAXES

  Under U.S. Treasury Regulations, the Fund is required to withhold and remit to
the U.S. Treasury 31% of dividends, capital gain income and redemption  proceeds
paid  on  the accounts  of  those shareholders  who  fail to  furnish  their tax
identification numbers on IRS Form W-9 (or  IRS Form W-8 in the case of  certain
foreign   shareholders)   with   the  required   certifications   regarding  the
shareholder's status  under  the federal  income  tax law.  Notwithstanding  the
foregoing, dividends of net investment income and

                                       20
<PAGE>
short-term  capital gains to a foreign  shareholder will generally be subject to
U.S. withholding tax at the rate of 30% (or lower treaty rate).

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

  THE FUND  EXPECTS TO  DECLARE DIVIDENDS  DAILY  AND TO  PAY DIVIDENDS  OF  NET
INVESTMENT  INCOME, IF ANY, MONTHLY AND  MAKE DISTRIBUTIONS AT LEAST ANNUALLY OF
ANY NET CAPITAL  GAINS. As  of October  31, 1993, the  Fund has  a capital  loss
carryforward  for  federal  income  tax  purposes  of  approximately $9,319,000.
Accordingly,  no  capital  gains  distribution   is  expected  to  be  paid   to
shareholders  until net gains have been realized in excess of such carryforward.
Dividends paid by the Fund with respect  to each class of shares, to the  extent
any dividends are paid, will be calculated in the same manner, at the same time,
on  the same day and will be in the same amount except that each class will bear
its own distribution charges, generally resulting in lower dividends for Class B
and Class C shares. Distributions of capital gains, if any, will be in the  same
amount for each class of shares. See "How the Fund Values its Shares."

  Shares  will begin earning  daily dividends on the  business day following the
settlement date.  Shares  continue  to  earn  daily  dividends  until  they  are
redeemed.  In the event an investor redeems all the shares in his or her account
at any  time during  the month,  all daily  dividends declared  to the  date  of
redemption will be paid at the time of redemption.

  DIVIDENDS  AND DISTRIBUTIONS WILL BE PAID  IN ADDITIONAL FUND SHARES, BASED ON
THE NET  ASSET  VALUE  OF EACH  CLASS  ON  THE PAYMENT  DATE  AND  RECORD  DATE,
RESPECTIVELY,  OR  SUCH OTHER  DATE AS  THE TRUSTEES  MAY DETERMINE,  UNLESS THE
SHAREHOLDER ELECTS IN  WRITING NOT  LESS THAN FIVE  BUSINESS DAYS  PRIOR TO  THE
PAYMENT  DATE TO RECEIVE SUCH DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS IN CASH. Such election
should be submitted to Account Maintenance,  P.O. Box 15015, New Brunswick,  New
Jersey  08906-5015. If you hold shares through Prudential Securities, you should
contact your financial adviser to  elect to receive dividends and  distributions
in  cash. The Fund  will notify each  shareholder after the  close of the Fund's
taxable year both of  the dollar amount  and the taxable  status of that  year's
dividends and distributions on a per share basis.

  WHEN  THE FUND  GOES "EX-DIVIDEND", ITS  NAV IS  REDUCED BY THE  AMOUNT OF THE
DISTRIBUTION. IF  YOU BUY  SHARES  JUST PRIOR  TO  THE EX-DIVIDEND  DATE  (WHICH
GENERALLY OCCURS FOUR BUSINESS DAYS PRIOR TO THE RECORD DATE), THE PRICE YOU PAY
WILL  INCLUDE THE DISTRIBUTION AND A PORTION OF YOUR INVESTMENT WILL BE RETURNED
TO YOU AS A TAXABLE DISTRIBUTION. YOU SHOULD, THEREFORE, CONSIDER THE TIMING  OF
DISTRIBUTIONS WHEN MAKING YOUR PURCHASES.

                              GENERAL INFORMATION

DESCRIPTION OF SHARES

  THE  FUND IS AN OPEN-END INVESTMENT COMPANY WHICH WAS ORGANIZED UNDER THE LAWS
OF MASSACHUSETTS ON SEPTEMBER  22, 1986 AS AN  UNINCORPORATED BUSINESS TRUST,  A
FORM OF ORGANIZATION THAT IS COMMONLY CALLED A MASSACHUSETTS BUSINESS TRUST. THE
FUND  IS AUTHORIZED TO ISSUE  AN UNLIMITED NUMBER OF  SHARES, DIVIDED INTO THREE
CLASSES, DESIGNATED  CLASS  A,  CLASS  B  AND CLASS  C.  Each  class  of  shares
represents  an interest in the  same assets of the Fund  and is identical in all
respects except that (i) each class bears different distribution expenses,  (ii)
each  class has  exclusive voting  rights with  respect to  its distribution and
service plan (except that the  Fund has agreed with  the SEC in connection  with
the  offering of a conversion feature on  Class B shares to submit any amendment
of the Class A Plan to both Class A and Class B shareholders), (iii) each  class
has  a  different  exchange  privilege  and (iv)  only  Class  B  shares  have a
conversion feature. See  "How the  Fund is Managed--Distributor."  The Fund  has
received  an order  from the  SEC permitting the  issuance and  sale of multiple
classes of shares.  Currently, the  Fund is offering  three classes,  designated
Class    A,    Class    B    and   Class    C    shares.    Pursuant    to   the

                                       21
<PAGE>
Fund's Declaration  of  Trust,  the  Trustees  may  authorize  the  creation  of
additional   series  of  shares  and  classes  within  such  series,  with  such
preferences, privileges,  limitations  and voting  and  dividend rights  as  the
Trustees may determine.

  The  Trustees may increase or decrease the number of authorized shares. Shares
of the Fund, when issued, are fully paid, nonassessable, fully transferable  and
redeemable at the option of the holder. Shares are also redeemable at the option
of  the Fund under  certain circumstances as  described under "How  to Sell Your
Shares." Each  share  of  beneficial interest  of  each  class is  equal  as  to
earnings,  assets and voting privileges; except as noted above, each class bears
the expenses  related  to  the  distribution  of  its  shares.  Except  for  the
conversion  feature  applicable  to Class  B  shares, there  are  no conversion,
preemptive or other subscription rights. In the event of liquidation, each share
of the Fund is  entitled to its portion  of all of the  Fund's assets after  all
debt  and expenses of the Fund have been  paid. Since Class B and Class C shares
generally bear higher distribution expenses than Class A shares, the liquidation
proceeds to shareholders of those classes are likely to be lower than to Class A
shareholders. The Fund's  shares do not  have cumulative voting  rights for  the
election of Trustees.

  THE FUND DOES NOT INTEND TO HOLD ANNUAL MEETINGS OF SHAREHOLDERS. SHAREHOLDERS
HAVE CERTAIN RIGHTS, INCLUDING THE RIGHT TO CALL A MEETING UPON A VOTE OF 10% OF
THE FUND'S OUTSTANDING SHARES FOR THE PURPOSE OF VOTING ON THE REMOVAL OF ONE OR
MORE TRUSTEES OR TO TRANSACT ANY OTHER BUSINESS.

  Under  Massachusetts law, shareholders of a  business trust may, under certain
circumstances, be held personally liable as partners for the obligations of  the
Fund  beyond the amount of  their investment in the Fund,  which is not the case
with a  corporation.  The  Declaration  of  Trust  of  the  Fund  provides  that
shareholders  shall not  be subject  to any personal  liability for  the acts or
obligations of the Fund and that every written obligation, contract,  instrument
or undertaking made by the Fund shall contain a provision to the effect that the
shareholders are not individually bound thereunder.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

  This  Prospectus, including the Statement  of Additional Information which has
been incorporated by reference herein, does not contain all the information  set
forth  in the Registration  Statement filed by  the Fund with  the SEC under the
Securities Act of 1933. Copies of the Registration Statement may be obtained  at
a  reasonable charge  from the SEC  or may  be examined, without  charge, at the
office of the SEC in Washington, D.C.

                               SHAREHOLDER GUIDE

HOW TO BUY SHARES OF THE FUND

  YOU MAY PURCHASE SHARES OF THE FUND THROUGH PRUDENTIAL SECURITIES, PRUSEC,  OR
DIRECTLY  FROM  THE  FUND THROUGH  ITS  TRANSFER AGENT,  PRUDENTIAL  MUTUAL FUND
SERVICES, INC. (PMFS OR THE TRANSFER AGENT) ATTENTION: INVESTMENT SERVICES, P.O.
BOX 15020, NEW BRUNSWICK, NEW JERSEY 08906-5020. The minimum initial  investment
for  Class A  and Class  B shares  is $1,000  per class  and $5,000  for Class C
shares. The minimum subsequent investment is  $100 for all classes. All  minimum
investment  requirements are waived for  certain retirement and employee savings
plans or  custodial accounts  for  the benefit  of  minors. For  purchases  made
through  the  Automatic  Savings  Accumulation  Plan,  the  minimum  initial and
subsequent investment is $50. See "Shareholder Services."

  THE PURCHASE PRICE IS THE NAV  PER SHARE NEXT DETERMINED FOLLOWING RECEIPT  OF
AN  ORDER BY  THE TRANSFER  AGENT OR PRUDENTIAL  SECURITIES PLUS  A SALES CHARGE
WHICH, AT YOUR OPTION, MAY BE IMPOSED EITHER (I) AT THE TIME OF PURCHASE  (CLASS
A  SHARES)  OR  (II) ON  A  DEFERRED BASIS  (CLASS  B  OR CLASS  C  SHARES). SEE
"ALTERNATIVE PURCHASE PLAN" BELOW. SEE ALSO "HOW THE FUND VALUES ITS SHARES."

                                       22
<PAGE>
  Application forms can be obtained from PMFS, Prudential Securities or  Prusec.
If  a stock  certificate is desired,  it must  be requested in  writing for each
transaction. Certificates are issued only for full shares. Shareholders who hold
their shares through Prudential Securities will not receive share certificates.

  The Fund  reserves  the right  to  reject  any purchase  order  (including  an
exchange  into the Fund) or to suspend  or modify the continuous offering of its
shares. See "How to Sell Your Shares."

  Your dealer is responsible  for forwarding payment promptly  to the Fund.  The
Distributor  reserves the right  to cancel any purchase  order for which payment
has not been received by the fifth business day following the investment.

  Transactions in Fund  shares may be  subject to postage  and handling  charges
imposed by your dealer.

  PURCHASE  BY WIRE. For an initial purchase of  shares of the Fund by wire, you
must first telephone PMFS  at (800) 225-1852 (toll-free)  to receive an  account
number.  The following  information will be  requested: your  name, address, tax
identification number, class  election, dividend  distribution election,  amount
being  wired and wiring bank.  Instructions should then be  given by you to your
bank to transfer funds by wire to  State Street Bank and Trust Company,  Boston,
Massachusetts,  Custody and Shareholder Services Division, Attention: Prudential
U.S. Government Fund, specifying on the wire the account number assigned by PMFS
and your name and identifying the sales charge alternative (Class A, Class B  or
Class C shares).

  If  you arrange  for receipt by  State Street  of Federal Funds  prior to 4:15
P.M., New York time, on a business day,  you may purchase shares of the Fund  as
of that day.

  In  making a subsequent purchase  order by wire, you  should wire State Street
directly and should be sure that  the wire specifies Prudential U.S.  Government
Fund,  Class A, Class B  or Class C shares and  your name and individual account
number. It is  not necessary  to call PMFS  to make  subsequent purchase  orders
utilizing  Federal Funds. The  minimum amount which  may be invested  by wire is
$1,000.

ALTERNATIVE PURCHASE PLAN

  THE FUND OFFERS THREE CLASSES OF SHARES (CLASS A, CLASS B AND CLASS C  SHARES)
WHICH  ALLOWS YOU TO CHOOSE THE MOST  BENEFICIAL SALES CHARGE STRUCTURE FOR YOUR
INDIVIDUAL CIRCUMSTANCES GIVEN THE  AMOUNT OF THE PURCHASE,  THE LENGTH OF  TIME
YOU  EXPECT TO  HOLD THE  SHARES AND  OTHER RELEVANT  CIRCUMSTANCES (ALTERNATIVE
PURCHASE PLAN).

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      ANNUAL 12B-1 FEES
                                                     (AS A % OF AVERAGE
                                                            DAILY
                        SALES CHARGE                     NET ASSETS)                  OTHER INFORMATION
           --------------------------------------  -----------------------  --------------------------------------
<S>        <C>                                     <C>                      <C>
CLASS A    Maximum initial sales charge of 4% of   .30 of 1% (Currently     Initial sales charge waived or reduced
           the public offering price               being charged at a rate  for certain purchases
                                                   of .15 of 1%)
CLASS B    Maximum contingent deferred sales       1% (Currently being      Shares convert to Class A shares
           charge or CDSC of 5% of the lesser of   charged at a rate of     approximately seven years after
           the amount invested or the redemption   .85 of 1%)               purchase
           proceeds; declines to zero after six
           years
CLASS C    Maximum CDSC of 1% of the lesser of     1% (Currently being      Shares do not convert to another class
           the amount invested or the redemption   charged at a rate of
           proceeds on redemptions made within     .75 of 1%)
           one year of purchase
</TABLE>

  The three classes  of shares represent  an interest in  the same portfolio  of
investments  of the Fund  and have the  same rights, except  that (i) each class
bears the separate  expenses of its  Rule 12b-1 distribution  and service  plan,
(ii)  each class has exclusive voting rights with respect to its plan (except as
noted under  the  heading  "General Information--Description  of  Shares"),  and

                                       23
<PAGE>
(iii) only Class B shares have a conversion feature. The three classes also have
separate  exchange  privileges. See  "How to  Exchange  Your Shares"  below. The
income attributable to  each class and  the dividends payable  on the shares  of
each  class will be reduced by the amount of the distribution fee of each class.
Class B and Class C shares bear the expenses of a higher distribution fee  which
will  generally  cause them  to  have higher  expense  ratios and  to  pay lower
dividends than the Class A shares.

  Financial advisers and  other sales agents  who sell shares  of the Fund  will
receive  different compensation for selling Class A,  Class B and Class C shares
and will generally receive more compensation  initially for selling Class A  and
Class B shares than for selling Class C shares.

  IN  SELECTING A PURCHASE ALTERNATIVE, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER, AMONG OTHER THINGS,
(1) the length of time you expect to hold your investment, (2) the amount of any
applicable sales charge (whether imposed at the time of purchase or  redemption)
and  distribution-related fees, as noted above,  (3) whether you qualify for any
reduction or waiver  of any applicable  sales charge, (4)  the various  exchange
privileges  among the  different classes  of shares  (see "How  to Exchange Your
Shares" below) and  (5) that  Class B shares  automatically convert  to Class  A
shares  approximately seven years after purchase (see "Conversion Feature--Class
B Shares" below).

  The following  is  provided to  assist  you  in determining  which  method  of
purchase  best suits your individual circumstances  and is based on current fees
and expenses being charged to the Fund:

  If you intend to hold your investment in the Fund for less than 7 years and do
not qualify for a reduced sales charge  on Class A shares, since Class A  shares
are  subject to  a maximum  initial sales charge  of 4%  and Class  B shares are
subject to a CDSC of 5% which declines to zero over a 6 year period, you  should
consider purchasing Class C shares over either Class A or Class B shares.

  If  you intend to hold your investment for  7 years or more and do not qualify
for a reduced sales charge  on Class A shares, since  Class B shares convert  to
Class  A shares  approximately 7  years after purchase  and because  all of your
money would be  invested initially in  the case  of Class B  shares, you  should
consider purchasing Class B shares over either Class A or Class C shares.

  If  you qualify for a reduced  sales charge on Class A  shares, it may be more
advantageous for you to purchase Class A  shares over either Class B or Class  C
shares  regardless  of how  long you  intend to  hold your  investment. However,
unlike Class B and Class C shares, you would not have all of your money invested
initially because the sales charge on Class A shares is deducted at the time  of
purchase.

  If  you do not  qualify for a reduced  sales charge on Class  A shares and you
purchase Class B or Class C shares,  you would have to hold your investment  for
more than 5 years in the case of Class B shares and 6 years in the case of Class
C  shares for  the higher  cumulative annual  distribution-related fee  on those
shares to exceed the initial  sales charge plus cumulative annual  distribution-
related fee on Class A shares. This does not take into account the time value of
money,  which  further reduces  the  impact of  the higher  Class  B or  Class C
distribution-related fee on the investment, fluctuations in net asset value, the
effect of the return on the investment  over this period of time or  redemptions
during which the CDSC is applicable.

  ALL PURCHASES OF $1 MILLION OR MORE, EITHER AS PART OF A SINGLE INVESTMENT OR,
UNDER  RIGHTS OF ACCUMULATION OR LETTERS OF  INTENT, MUST BE FOR CLASS A SHARES.
SEE "REDUCTION AND WAIVER OF INITIAL SALES CHARGES" BELOW.

                                       24
<PAGE>
  CLASS A SHARES

  The offering price of Class A shares for investors choosing the initial  sales
charge  alternative is the next determined NAV plus a sales charge (expressed as
a percentage of the offering price and  of the amount invested) as shown in  the
following table:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                            SALES CHARGE AS   SALES CHARGE AS   DEALER CONCESSION
                             PERCENTAGE OF     PERCENTAGE OF    AS PERCENTAGE OF
    AMOUNT OF PURCHASE      OFFERING PRICE    AMOUNT INVESTED    OFFERING PRICE
- --------------------------  ---------------   ---------------   -----------------
<S>                         <C>               <C>               <C>
$0 to $49,999                    4.00%             4.17               3.75%
$50,000 to $99,999               3.50              3.83               3.25
$100,000 to $249,999             2.75              2.83               2.50
$250,000 to $499,999             2.00              2.04               1.90
$500,000 to $999,999             1.50              1.52               1.40
$1,000,000 and above*            None              None               None
</TABLE>

  Selling  dealers may be deemed to be  underwriters, as that term is defined in
the Securities Act.

  REDUCTION AND  WAIVER OF  INITIAL  SALES CHARGES.  Reduced sales  charges  are
available  through Rights of  Accumulation and Letters of  Intent. Shares of the
Fund and shares of other Prudential  Mutual Funds (excluding money market  funds
other  than those acquired pursuant to the exchange privilege) may be aggregated
to determine  the applicable  reduction. See  "Purchase and  Redemption of  Fund
Shares--Reduction  and Waiver of  Initial Sales Charges--Class  A Shares" in the
Statement of Additional Information.

  BENEFIT PLANS. Class A shares may be  purchased at NAV, without payment of  an
initial sales charge, by pension, profit-sharing or other employee benefit plans
qualified   under  Section  401  of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code  and  deferred
compensation and annuity plans under Sections 457 and 403(b)(7) of the  Internal
Revenue  Code (Benefit Plans), provided that the  plan has existing assets of at
least $1 million invested in shares of Prudential Mutual Funds (excluding  money
market  funds other than  those acquired pursuant to  the exchange privilege) or
1,000 eligible employees or members. In the case of Benefit Plans whose accounts
are held directly with the Transfer Agent or Prudential Securities and for which
the Transfer  Agent  or Prudential  Securities  does individual  account  record
keeping (Direct Account Benefit Plans) and Benefit Plans sponsored by PSI or its
subsidiaries  (PSI or Subsidiary Prototype Benefit Plans), Class A shares may be
purchased at NAV by participants who are repaying loans made from such plans  to
the participant.

  PRUDENTIAL  RETIREMENT ACCUMULATION PROGRAM 401(K) PLAN. Class A shares may be
purchased at net asset value, with a  waiver of the initial sales charge, by  or
on  behalf  of participants  in the  Prudential Retirement  Accumulation Program
401(k) Plan  for which  the  Transfer Agent  or Prudential  Securities  provides
recordkeeping  services (PruRap Plan) provided that  (i) for existing plans, the
plan has existing assets of $1 million or more, as measured on the last business
day of the month, invested in shares of Prudential Mutual Funds (excluding money
market funds other than those acquired pursuant to the exchange privilege)  held
at  the Transfer Agent or Prudential Securities and (ii) for new plans, the plan
initially invests $1 million  or more in shares  of non-money market  Prudential
Mutual Funds or has at least 1,000 eligible employees or members.

  SPECIAL  RULES APPLICABLE  TO RETIREMENT  PLANS. After  a Benefit  Plan or the
PruRap Plan  qualifies  to  purchase  Class A  shares  at  NAV,  all  subsequent
purchases will be made at NAV.

  MISCELLANEOUS  WAIVERS. In addition,  Class A shares may  be purchased at NAV,
through Prudential Securities or the  Transfer Agent, by the following  persons:
(a)  Directors and officers of  the Fund and other  Prudential Mutual Funds, (b)
employees of Prudential Securities and PMF and their subsidiaries and members of
the families  of such  persons who  maintain an  "employee related"  account  at
Prudential Securities or the Transfer Agent, (c) employees and special agents of
Prudential  and its subsidiaries and all  persons who have retired directly from
active service  with  Prudential or  one  of its  subsidiaries,  (d)  registered
representatives and employees of dealers who have entered into a selected dealer
agreement  with  Prudential  Securities  provided  that  purchases  at  NAV  are
permitted by  such person's  employer  and (e)  investors  who have  a  business
relationship  with  a financial  adviser who  joined Prudential  Securities from
another investment firm, provided that (i)  the purchase is made within 90  days
of

                                       25
<PAGE>
the commencement of the financial adviser's employment at Prudential Securities,
(ii)  the  purchase is  made  with proceeds  of a  redemption  of shares  of any
open-end, non-money market  fund sponsored by  the financial adviser's  previous
employer  (other than a fund which imposes  a distribution or service fee of .25
of 1% or less) on which no deferred sales load, fee or other charge was  imposed
on  redemption and (iii) the financial adviser  served as the client's broker on
the previous purchases.

  You must  notify the  Transfer  Agent either  directly or  through  Prudential
Securities  or Prusec that  you are entitled  to the reduction  or waiver of the
sales charge. The reduction or waiver will be granted subject to confirmation of
your entitlement.  No initial  sales charges  are imposed  upon Class  A  shares
purchased  upon the reinvestment  of dividends and  distributions. See "Purchase
and  Redemption  of   Fund  Shares--Reduction  and   Waiver  of  Initial   Sales
Charges--Class A Shares" in the Statement of Additional Information.

  CLASS B AND CLASS C SHARES

  The offering price of Class B and Class C shares for investors choosing one of
the  deferred sales  charge alternatives  is the  NAV per  share next determined
following receipt of an  order by the Transfer  Agent or Prudential  Securities.
Although  there is no sales charge imposed  at the time of purchase, redemptions
of Class B and Class C  shares may be subject to a  CDSC. See "How to Sell  Your
Shares--Contingent Deferred Sales Charges."

HOW TO SELL YOUR SHARES

  YOU  CAN REDEEM SHARES OF THE  FUND AT ANY TIME FOR  CASH AT THE NAV PER SHARE
NEXT DETERMINED AFTER THE REDEMPTION REQUEST  IS RECEIVED IN PROPER FORM BY  THE
TRANSFER  AGENT OR PRUDENTIAL SECURITIES. See  "How the Fund Values its Shares."
In certain cases, however, redemption proceeds will be reduced by the amount  of
any  applicable  contingent  deferred  sales  charge,  as  described  below. See
"Contingent Deferred Sales Charges" below.

  IF YOU HOLD SHARES OF THE FUND THROUGH PRUDENTIAL SECURITIES, YOU MUST  REDEEM
YOUR  SHARES BY CONTACTING YOUR PRUDENTIAL  SECURITIES FINANCIAL ADVISER. IF YOU
HOLD SHARES IN NON-CERTIFICATE FORM, A WRITTEN REQUEST FOR REDEMPTION SIGNED  BY
YOU  EXACTLY AS THE ACCOUNT IS REGISTERED IS REQUIRED. IF YOU HOLD CERTIFICATES,
THE CERTIFICATES SIGNED IN  THE NAME(S) SHOWN ON  THE FACE OF THE  CERTIFICATES,
MUST BE RECEIVED BY THE TRANSFER AGENT IN ORDER FOR THE REDEMPTION REQUEST TO BE
PROCESSED.  IF REDEMPTION IS  REQUESTED BY A  CORPORATION, PARTNERSHIP, TRUST OR
FIDUCIARY, WRITTEN EVIDENCE OF AUTHORITY  ACCEPTABLE TO THE TRANSFER AGENT  MUST
BE  SUBMITTED  BEFORE  SUCH REQUEST  WILL  BE ACCEPTED.  All  correspondence and
documents concerning  redemptions should  be sent  to the  Fund in  care of  its
Transfer  Agent, Prudential  Mutual Fund  Services, Inc.,  Attention: Redemption
Services, P.O. Box 15010, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08906-5010.

  If the proceeds of the redemption (a) exceed $50,000, (b) are to be paid to  a
person  other than the record owner, (c) are to be sent to an address other than
the address  on the  Transfer  Agent's records,  or  (d) are  to  be paid  to  a
corporation, partnership, trust or fiduciary, the signature(s) on the redemption
request and on the certificates, if any, or stock power must be guaranteed by an
"eligible  guarantor institution." An  "eligible guarantor institution" includes
any bank, broker, dealer or credit union. The Transfer Agent reserves the  right
to  request additional information  from, and make  reasonable inquiries of, any
eligible guarantor institution. For clients of Prusec, a signature guarantee may
be obtained from the agency or  office manager of most Prudential Insurance  and
Financial Services or Prudential Preferred Financial Services offices.

  PAYMENT FOR SHARES PRESENTED FOR REDEMPTION WILL BE MADE BY CHECK WITHIN SEVEN
DAYS  AFTER  RECEIPT BY  THE TRANSFER  AGENT OF  THE CERTIFICATE  AND/OR WRITTEN
REQUEST EXCEPT  AS  INDICATED  BELOW.  IF YOU  HOLD  SHARES  THROUGH  PRUDENTIAL
SECURITIES, PAYMENT FOR SHARES PRESENTED FOR REDEMPTION WILL BE CREDITED TO YOUR
PRUDENTIAL  SECURITIES ACCOUNT, UNLESS YOU  INDICATE OTHERWISE. SUCH PAYMENT MAY
BE POSTPONED OR THE RIGHT OF REDEMPTION SUSPENDED AT TIMES (A) WHEN THE NEW YORK
STOCK EXCHANGE IS  CLOSED FOR OTHER  THAN CUSTOMARY WEEKENDS  AND HOLIDAYS,  (B)
WHEN  TRADING ON SUCH EXCHANGE IS RESTRICTED,  (C) WHEN AN EMERGENCY EXISTS AS A
RESULT OF WHICH DISPOSAL BY THE FUND OF SECURITIES OWNED BY IT IS NOT REASONABLY
PRACTICABLE OR IT IS NOT REASONABLY PRACTICABLE FOR THE FUND FAIRLY TO DETERMINE

                                       26
<PAGE>
THE VALUE OF ITS  NET ASSETS, OR (D)  DURING ANY OTHER PERIOD  WHEN THE SEC,  BY
ORDER,  SO PERMITS;  PROVIDED THAT APPLICABLE  RULES AND REGULATIONS  OF THE SEC
SHALL GOVERN AS TO WHETHER THE CONDITIONS PRESCRIBED IN (B), (C) OR (D) EXIST.

  PAYMENT FOR REDEMPTION OF RECENTLY PURCHASED SHARES WILL BE DELAYED UNTIL  THE
FUND  OR ITS TRANSFER  AGENT HAS BEEN  ADVISED THAT THE  PURCHASE CHECK HAS BEEN
HONORED, UP TO 10 CALENDAR DAYS FROM  THE TIME OF RECEIPT OF THE PURCHASE  CHECK
BY THE TRANSFER AGENT. SUCH DELAY MAY BE AVOIDED BY PURCHASING SHARES BY WIRE OR
BY CERTIFIED OR OFFICIAL BANK CHECK.

  REDEMPTION  IN KIND. If the Trustees determine that it would be detrimental to
the best interests  of the remaining  shareholders of the  Fund to make  payment
wholly  or partly in cash, the Fund may  pay the redemption price in whole or in
part by a distribution  in kind of securities  from the investment portfolio  of
the  Fund, in  lieu of  cash, in  conformity with  applicable rules  of the SEC.
Securities will be readily marketable and will  be valued in the same manner  as
in  a regular redemption. See  "How the Fund Values  its Shares." If your shares
are redeemed in kind, you would incur transaction costs in converting the assets
into cash. The Fund, however, has elected to be governed by Rule 18f-1 under the
Investment Company  Act, under  which the  Fund is  obligated to  redeem  shares
solely  in cash up to the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of the net asset value of the
Fund during any 90-day period for any one shareholder.

  INVOLUNTARY REDEMPTION. In order to reduce expenses of the Fund, the  Trustees
may  redeem all of the shares of any shareholder, other than a shareholder which
is an IRA or other tax-deferred retirement  plan, whose account has a net  asset
value  of  less  than  $500  due  to  a  redemption.  The  Fund  will  give such
shareholders 60  days' prior  written  notice in  which to  purchase  sufficient
additional  shares to avoid such redemption. No contingent deferred sales charge
will be imposed on any involuntary redemption.

  30-DAY REPURCHASE PRIVILEGE. If you redeem your shares and have not previously
exercised the repurchase privilege  you may reinvest any  portion or all of  the
proceeds  of such redemption  in shares of  the Fund at  the NAV next determined
after the order is received, which must be within 30 days after the date of  the
redemption. No sales charge will apply to such repurchases. You will receive PRO
RATA credit for any contingent deferred sales charge paid in connection with the
redemption  of Class B  or Class C  shares. You must  notify the Fund's Transfer
Agent, either directly or through Prudential  Securities or Prusec, at the  time
the  repurchase privilege is exercised  that you are entitled  to credit for the
contingent deferred sales  charge previously  paid. Exercise  of the  repurchase
privilege  will generally  not affect federal  income tax treatment  of any gain
realized upon redemption. If the redemption resulted  in a loss, some or all  of
the  loss, depending on the  amount reinvested, will not  be allowed for federal
income tax purposes.

  CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGES

  Redemptions of Class B shares will  be subject to a contingent deferred  sales
charge  or CDSC declining from 5% to zero over a six-year period. Class C shares
redeemed within one year of purchase will be subject to a 1% CDSC. The CDSC will
be deducted from the redemption proceeds and reduce the amount paid to you.  The
CDSC will be imposed on any redemption by you which reduces the current value of
your  Class B or Class C  shares to an amount which  is lower than the amount of
all payments by you for  shares during the preceding six  years, in the case  of
Class  B shares, and  one year, in  the case of  Class C shares.  A CDSC will be
applied on the lesser of the original purchase price or the current value of the
shares being redeemed. Increases in the value of your shares or shares purchased
through reinvestment of dividends  or distributions are not  subject to a  CDSC.
The  amount of any contingent deferred sales charge will be paid to and retained
by the Distributor. See  "How the Fund is  Managed--Distributor" and "Waiver  of
the Contingent Deferred Sales Charges--Class B Shares" below.

  The  amount of the  CDSC, if any, will  vary depending on  the number of years
from the time of payment for the purchase of shares until the time of redemption
of such shares. Solely for purposes of determining the number of years from  the
time of any payment for the purchase of shares, all payments during a month will
be    aggregated    and   deemed    to   have    been    made   on    the   last

                                       27
<PAGE>
day of the month. The  CDSC will be calculated from  the first day of the  month
after  the initial  purchase, excluding  the time  shares were  held in  a money
market fund. See "How to Exchange Your Shares."

  The following table sets forth the rates of the CDSC applicable to redemptions
of Class B shares:

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

  In determining whether a CDSC is  applicable to a redemption, the  calculation
will  be made in a manner  that results in the lowest  possible rate. It will be
assumed that  the  redemption  is  made first  of  amounts  representing  shares
acquired  pursuant to the  reinvestment of dividends  and distributions; then of
amounts representing the increase in net  asset value above the total amount  of
payments  for the purchase  of Fund shares  made during the  preceding six years
(five years for  shares purchased prior  to January 22,  1990); then of  amounts
representing  the cost  of shares  held beyond  the applicable  CDSC period; and
finally, of amounts representing the cost of shares held for the longest  period
of time within the applicable CDSC period.

  For  example, assume you purchased  100 Class B shares at  $10 per share for a
cost of $1,000. Subsequently, you acquired  5 additional Class B shares  through
dividend  reinvestment. During the second year after the purchase you decided to
redeem $500 of your investment. Assuming at  the time of the redemption the  NAV
had  appreciated to  $12 per share,  the value of  your Class B  shares would be
$1,260 (105 shares at $12 per share). The CDSC would not be applied to the value
of the reinvested dividend shares  and the amount which represents  appreciation
($260).  Therefore, $240 of the $500 redemption proceeds ($500 minus $260) would
be charged  at a  rate of  4%  (the applicable  rate in  the second  year  after
purchase) for a total CDSC of $9.60.

  For  federal income tax purposes, the amount  of the CDSC will reduce the gain
or increase  the loss,  as the  case may  be, on  the amount  recognized on  the
redemption of shares.

  WAIVER OF THE CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGES--CLASS B SHARES. The CDSC will
be  waived in the  case of a redemption  following the death  or disability of a
shareholder or,  in  the  case  of  a trust  account,  following  the  death  or
disability  of  the  grantor.  The  waiver is  available  for  total  or partial
redemptions of shares owned by a person, either individually or in joint tenancy
(with rights of  survivorship), or  a trust,  at the  time of  death or  initial
determination  of disability, provided  that the shares  were purchased prior to
death or disability.

  The CDSC will also be waived in the  case of a total or partial redemption  in
connection  with certain distributions  made without penalty  under the Internal
Revenue Code  from a  tax-deferred retirement  plan, an  IRA or  Section  403(b)
custodial   account.  These  distributions  include:  (i)   in  the  case  of  a
tax-deferred retirement plan, a lump-sum or other distribution after retirement;
(ii) in the case of  an IRA or Section 403(b)  custodial account, a lump-sum  or
other distribution after attaining age 59 1/2; and (iii) a tax-free return of an
excess  contribution or plan distributions following  the death or disability of
the shareholder,  provided that  the shares  were purchased  prior to  death  or
disability.  The waiver  does not apply  in the  case of a  tax-free rollover or
transfer of assets, other  than one following a  separation from service  (I.E.,
following  voluntary  or  involuntary  termination  of  employment  or following
retirement). Under  no circumstances  will  the CDSC  be waived  on  redemptions
resulting  from the termination  of a tax-deferred  retirement plan, unless such
redemptions otherwise qualify for  a waiver as described  above. In the case  of
Direct  Account and PSI or Subsidiary prototype  Benefit Plans, the CDSC will be
waived on  redemptions  which  represent  borrowings  from  such  plans.  Shares
purchased  with amounts used to repay a loan from such plans on which a CDSC was
not previously deducted will

                                       28
<PAGE>
thereafter be subject to  a CDSC without  regard to the  time such amounts  were
previously  invested. In the case of a 401(k) plan, the CDSC will also be waived
upon the redemption of  shares purchased with amounts  used to repay loans  made
from  the  account to  the  participant and  from  which a  CDSC  was previously
deducted.

  In addition, the CDSC  will also be  waived on redemptions  of shares held  by
Trustees of the Fund.

  You  must  notify the  Transfer Agent  either  directly or  through Prudential
Securities or Prusec, at the time of redemption, that you are entitled to waiver
of the CDSC and provide the Transfer Agent with such supporting documentation as
it may deem appropriate. The waiver  will be granted subject to confirmation  of
your  entitlement. See  "Purchase and Redemption  of Fund  Shares--Waiver of the
Contingent Deferred Sales Charge--Class B Shares" in the Statement of Additional
Information.

  A quantity discount may apply to redemptions of Class B shares purchased prior
to August  1,  1994.  See  "Purchase and  Redemption  of  Fund  Shares--Quantity
Discount--Class  B Shares Purchased prior to August 1, 1994" in the Statement of
Additional Information.

CONVERSION FEATURE--CLASS B SHARES

  Class B shares  will automatically convert  to Class A  shares on a  quarterly
basis approximately seven years after purchase. It is currently anticipated that
conversions  will occur during the months  of February, May, August and November
commencing in or about February 1995.  Conversions will be effected at  relative
net asset value without the imposition of any additional sales charge.

  Since  the Fund tracks amounts paid rather than the number of shares bought on
each purchase  of Class  B shares,  the number  of Class  B shares  eligible  to
convert  to  Class A  shares (excluding  shares  acquired through  the automatic
reinvestment of dividends and other distributions) (the Eligible Shares) will be
determined on each conversion date in accordance with the following formula: (i)
the ratio of (a) the  amounts paid for Class B  shares purchased at least  seven
years  prior to the conversion date to (b) the total amount paid for all Class B
shares purchased and  then held  in your account  (ii) multiplied  by the  total
number  of Class B shares purchased and then held in your account. Each time any
Eligible Shares in your account convert to Class A shares, all shares or amounts
representing Class B shares then in your account that were acquired through  the
automatic  reinvestment  of dividends  and other  distributions will  convert to
Class A shares.

  For purposes of  determining the  number of Eligible  Shares, if  the Class  B
shares  in  your account  on  any conversion  date  are the  result  of multiple
purchases at different net asset values per share, the number of Eligible Shares
calculated as described  above will generally  be either more  or less than  the
number  of  shares  actually  purchased approximately  seven  years  before such
conversion date. For example, if 100 shares were initially purchased at $10  per
share  (for  a  total  of  $1,000)  and a  second  purchase  of  100  shares was
subsequently made at $11 per share (for  a total of $1,100), 95.24 shares  would
convert  approximately  seven  years  from the  initial  purchase  (i.e., $1,000
divided by $2,100 (47.62%)  multiplied by 200 shares  equals 95.24 shares).  The
Manager  reserves the right to modify the  formula for determining the number of
Eligible Shares in the future as it deems appropriate on notice to shareholders.

  Since annual distribution-related fees are lower for Class A shares than Class
B shares, the per share net asset value of the Class A shares may be higher than
that of  the Class  B  shares at  the time  of  conversion. Thus,  although  the
aggregate  dollar value will be  the same, you may  receive fewer Class A shares
than Class B shares converted. See "How the Fund Values its Shares."

  For purposes of calculating the applicable holding period for conversions, all
payments for Class B shares during a month  will be deemed to have been made  on
the last day of the month, or for Class B shares acquired through exchange, or a
series  of exchanges, on the last day of the month in which the original payment
for purchases of such  Class B shares  was made. For  Class B shares  previously
exchanged  for shares of a money market  fund, the time period during which such
shares were held in the money market fund will be excluded. For example, Class B
shares held in  a money market  fund for one  year will not  convert to Class  A
shares  until approximately eight years from purchase. For purposes of measuring
the time period during which shares are  held in a money market fund,  exchanges
will  be deemed to have been  made on the last day  of the month. Class B shares
acquired through exchange will convert to Class A shares after expiration of the
conversion period  applicable  to the  original  purchase of  such  shares.  The
conversion  feature described above  will not be  implemented and, consequently,
the first conversion of Class B

                                       29
<PAGE>
shares will  not  occur  before  February,  1995,  but  as  soon  thereafter  as
practicable.  At  that  time  all  amounts  representing  Class  B  shares  then
outstanding beyond the applicable  conversion period will automatically  convert
to  Class A  shares together  with all  shares or  amounts representing  Class B
shares  acquired   through  the   automatic   reinvestment  of   dividends   and
distributions then held in your account.

  The  conversion  feature  may be  subject  to the  continuing  availability of
opinions of counsel  or rulings  of the Internal  Revenue Service  (i) that  the
dividends  and other distributions paid on Class  A, Class B, and Class C shares
will not constitute "preferential dividends" under the Internal Revenue Code and
(ii) that the  conversion of  shares does not  constitute a  taxable event.  The
conversion  of  Class B  shares into  Class A  shares may  be suspended  if such
opinions or rulings are no longer available. If conversions are suspended, Class
B shares of  the Fund  will continue to  be subject,  possibly indefinitely,  to
their higher annual distribution and service fee.

  HOW TO EXCHANGE YOUR SHARES

  AS  A SHAREHOLDER  OF THE  FUND, YOU HAVE  AN EXCHANGE  PRIVILEGE WITH CERTAIN
OTHER PRUDENTIAL  MUTUAL FUNDS,  INCLUDING ONE  OR MORE  SPECIFIED MONEY  MARKET
FUNDS,  SUBJECT TO THE  MINIMUM INVESTMENT REQUIREMENTS OF  SUCH FUNDS. CLASS A,
CLASS B AND CLASS C SHARES OF THE FUND MAY BE EXCHANGED FOR CLASS A, CLASS B AND
CLASS C SHARES, RESPECTIVELY, OF ANOTHER FUND ON THE BASIS OF THE RELATIVE  NAV.
No sales charge will be imposed at the time of the exchange. Any applicable CDSC
payable upon the redemption of shares exchanged will be that imposed by the Fund
in  which shares were initially purchased and  will be calculated from the first
day of the month after the initial purchase, excluding the time shares were held
in a money market  fund. Class B and  Class C shares may  not be exchanged  into
money market funds other than Prudential Special Money Market Fund. For purposes
of  calculating the holding period applicable to the Class B conversion feature,
the time period during  which Class B  shares were held in  a money market  fund
will  be excluded. See  "Conversion Feature--Class B  Shares" above. An exchange
will be treated as a redemption and purchase for tax purposes. See  "Shareholder
Investment   Account--Exchange  Privilege"   in  the   Statement  of  Additional
Information.

  IN ORDER TO  EXCHANGE SHARES BY  TELEPHONE, YOU MUST  AUTHORIZE THE  TELEPHONE
EXCHANGE  PRIVILEGE ON YOUR INITIAL APPLICATION FORM OR BY WRITTEN NOTICE TO THE
TRANSFER AGENT AND HOLD SHARES IN NON-CERTIFICATE FORM. Thereafter you may  call
the  Fund at (800) 225-1852 to execute a telephone exchange of shares, weekdays,
except holidays, between the hours  of 8:00 a.m. and  6:00 p.m., New York  time.
For  your protection  and to prevent  fraudulent exchanges,  your telephone call
will be recorded and you will  be asked to provide your personal  identification
number.  A written confirmation of the exchange transaction will be sent to you.
NEITHER THE FUND NOR ITS AGENTS WILL  BE LIABLE FOR ANY LOSS, LIABILITY OR  COST
WHICH  RESULTS FROM ACTING  UPON INSTRUCTIONS REASONABLY  BELIEVED TO BE GENUINE
UNDER THE FOREGOING PROCEDURES. All exchanges will  be made on the basis of  the
relative  NAV of the two funds next  determined after the request is received in
good order.  The  Exchange Privilege  is  available  only in  states  where  the
exchange may legally be made.

  IF  YOU HOLD SHARES THROUGH PRUDENTIAL SECURITIES YOU MAY EXCHANGE YOUR SHARES
BY CONTACTING YOUR PRUDENTIAL SECURITIES FINANCIAL ADVISER.

  IF YOU HOLD CERTIFICATES, THE CERTIFICATES, SIGNED IN THE NAME(S) SHOWN ON THE
FACE OF  THE  CERTIFICATES MUST  BE  RETURNED IN  ORDER  FOR THE  SHARES  TO  BE
EXCHANGED. SEE "HOW TO SELL YOUR SHARES."

  You  may also  exchange shares  by mail by  writing to  Prudential Mutual Fund
Services, Inc., Attention: Exchange Processing,  P.O. Box 15010, New  Brunswick,
New Jersey 08906-5010.

  IN  PERIODS OF SEVERE MARKET OR  ECONOMIC CONDITIONS THE TELEPHONE EXCHANGE OF
SHARES MAY BE DIFFICULT TO  IMPLEMENT AND YOU SHOULD  MAKE EXCHANGES BY MAIL  BY
WRITING TO PRUDENTIAL MUTUAL FUND SERVICES, INC., AT THE ADDRESS NOTED ABOVE.

  SPECIAL  EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE. Commencing  in or about  February 1995, a special
exchange privilege is available for shareholders who qualify to purchase Class A
shares at NAV. See "Alternative Purchase Plan -- Class A Shares --Reduction  and
Waiver  of Initial Sales Charges" above.  Under this exchange privilege, amounts
representing any Class B and  Class C shares (which are  not subject to a  CDSC)
held in such a shareholders' account will be automatically exchanged for Class A
shares on a

                                       30
<PAGE>
quarterly  basis,  unless  the  shareholder elects  otherwise.  It  is currently
anticipated that this exchange will occur quarterly in February, May, August and
November. Eligibility  for this  exchange privilege  will be  calculated on  the
business  day prior to the date of the exchange. Amounts representing Class B or
Class C  shares which  are not  subject to  a CDSC  include the  following:  (1)
amounts  representing  Class  B  or  Class C  shares  acquired  pursuant  to the
automatic reinvestment of dividends and distributions, (2) amounts  representing
the  increase in the net asset value above  the total amount of payments for the
purchase of Class B or  Class C shares and (3)  amounts representing Class B  or
Class  C shares  held beyond  the applicable  CDSC period.  Class B  and Class C
shareholders  must  notify  the  Transfer  Agent  either  directly  or   through
Prudential Securities or Prusec that they are eligible for this special exchange
privilege.

  The  Exchange Privilege may be modified or  terminated at any time on 60 days'
notice to shareholders.

SHAREHOLDER SERVICES

  In addition to the exchange privilege, as  a shareholder in the Fund, you  can
take advantage of the following additional services and privileges:

  -  AUTOMATIC REINVESTMENT  OF DIVIDENDS  AND/OR DISTRIBUTIONS  WITHOUT A SALES
CHARGE. For your convenience, all  dividends or distributions are  automatically
reinvested  in full  and fractional shares  of the  Fund at NAV  without a sales
charge. You  may direct  the Transfer  Agent in  writing not  less than  5  full
business  days  prior to  the record  date to  have subsequent  dividends and/or
distributions sent in cash  rather than reinvested. If  you hold shares  through
Prudential Securities, you should contact your financial adviser.

  -  AUTOMATIC SAVINGS ACCUMULATION PLAN (ASAP). Under ASAP you may make regular
purchases of the  Fund's shares in  amounts as  little as $50  via an  automatic
debit  to a bank  account or Prudential Securities  account (including a Command
Account). For additional information  about this service,  you may contact  your
Prudential  Securities financial adviser, Prusec  representative or the Transfer
Agent directly.

  -  TAX-DEFERRED  RETIREMENT  PLANS.  Various  tax-deferred  retirement  plans,
including  a  401(k)  plan,  self-directed  individual  retirement  accounts and
"tax-sheltered accounts" under  Section 403(b)(7) of  the Internal Revenue  Code
are  available  through  the  Distributor.  These  plans  are  for  use  by both
self-employed individuals  and corporate  employers. These  plans permit  either
self-direction  of accounts  by participants,  or a  pooled account arrangement.
Information regarding  the establishment  of  these plans,  the  administration,
custodial  fees and other details is available from Prudential Securities or the
Transfer Agent. If you are considering adopting such a plan, you should  consult
with  your  own legal  or  tax adviser  with  respect to  the  establishment and
maintenance of such a plan.

  - SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL  PLAN. A  systematic withdrawal plan  is available  to
shareholders  which provides for monthly or  quarterly checks in any amount, not
less than $100  (which amount  is not necessarily  recommended). Withdrawals  of
Class  B and  Class C shares  may be subject  to a  CDSC. See "How  to Sell Your
Shares--Contingent Deferred Sales Charges."

  - REPORTS  TO SHAREHOLDERS.  The Fund  will send  you annual  and  semi-annual
reports.  The financial  statements appearing in  annual reports  are audited by
independent accountants.  In  order to  reduce  duplicate mailing  and  printing
expenses,  the Fund will  provide one annual  and semi-annual shareholder report
and annual prospectus per household. You  may request additional copies of  such
reports  by calling  (800) 225-1852  or by  writing to  the Fund  at One Seaport
Plaza, New York, New York 10292.  In addition, monthly unaudited financial  data
is available from the Fund upon request.

  - SHAREHOLDER INQUIRIES. Shareholder inquiries should be addressed to the Fund
at  One  Seaport Plaza,  New York,  New York  10292, or  by telephone,  at (800)
225-1852 (toll-free) or, from outside the U.S.A., at (908) 417-7555 (collect).

  For additional  information regarding  the services  and privileges  described
above,  see  "Shareholder Investment  Account"  in the  Statement  of Additional
Information.

                                       31
<PAGE>
                       THE PRUDENTIAL MUTUAL FUND FAMILY

  Prudential Mutual  Fund  Management  offers  a broad  range  of  mutual  funds
designed  to meet your individual needs. We welcome you to review the investment
options available  through our  family of  funds. For  more information  on  the
Prudential Mutual Funds, including charges and expenses, contact your Prudential
Securities  financial adviser or Prusec representative or telephone the Funds at
(800) 225-1852 for a free prospectus.  Read the prospectus carefully before  you
invest or send money.

                               TAXABLE BOND FUNDS
Prudential Adjustable Rate Securities Fund, Inc.
Prudential GNMA Fund, Inc.
Prudential Government Income Fund, Inc.
Prudential Government Securities Trust
  Intermediate Term Series
Prudential High Yield Fund, Inc.
Prudential Structured Maturity Fund, Inc.
  Income Portfolio
Prudential U.S. Government Fund
The BlackRock Government Income Trust

                             TAX-EXEMPT BOND FUNDS
Prudential California Municipal Fund
  California Series
  California Income Series
Prudential Municipal Bond Fund
  High Yield Series
  Insured Series
  Modified Term Series
Prudential Municipal Series Fund
  Arizona Series
  Florida Series
  Georgia Series
  Maryland Series
  Massachusetts Series
  Michigan Series
  Minnesota Series
  New Jersey Series
  New York Series
  North Carolina Series
  Ohio Series
  Pennsylvania Series
Prudential National Municipals Fund, Inc.

                                  GLOBAL FUNDS
Prudential Europe Growth Fund, Inc.
Prudential Global Fund, Inc.
Prudential Global Genesis Fund, Inc.
Prudential Global Natural Resources Fund, Inc.
Prudential Intermediate Global Income Fund, Inc.
Prudential Pacific Growth Fund, Inc.
Prudential Short-Term Global Income Fund, Inc.
  Global Assets Portfolio
  Short-Term Global Income Portfolio
Global Utility Fund, Inc.

                                  EQUITY FUNDS
Prudential Allocation Fund
  Conservatively Managed Portfolio
  Strategy Portfolio
Prudential Equity Fund, Inc.
Prudential Equity Income Fund
Prudential Growth Opportunity Fund, Inc.
Prudential IncomeVertible-R- Fund, Inc.
Prudential Multi-Sector Fund, Inc.
Prudential Strategist Fund, Inc.
Prudential Utility Fund, Inc.
Nicholas-Applegate Fund, Inc.
  Nicholas-Applegate Growth Equity Fund

                               MONEY MARKET FUNDS

- - TAXABLE MONEY MARKET FUNDS
Prudential Government Securities Trust
  Money Market Series
  U.S. Treasury Money Market Series
Prudential Special Money Market Fund
  Money Market Series
Prudential MoneyMart Assets

- - TAX-FREE MONEY MARKET FUNDS
Prudential Tax-Free Money Fund
Prudential California Municipal Fund
  California Money Market Series
Prudential Municipal Series Fund
  Connecticut Money Market Series
  Massachusetts Money Market Series
  New Jersey Money Market Series
  New York Money Market Series

- - COMMAND FUNDS
Command Money Fund
Command Government Securities Fund
Command Tax-Free Fund

- - INSTITUTIONAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS
Prudential Institutional Liquidity Portfolio, Inc.
  Institutional Money Market Series

                                      A-1
<PAGE>
No  dealer, sales representative or any other person has been authorized to give
any information or to  make any representations, other  than those contained  in
this Prospectus, in connection with the offer contained herein, and, if given or
made,  such  other information  or representations  must not  be relied  upon as
having been authorized by the Fund or the Distributor. This Prospectus does  not
constitute  an offer by the Fund or by the Distributor to sell or a solicitation
of any offer to buy any of the securities offered hereby in any jurisdiction  to
any person to whom it is unlawful to make such offer in such jurisdiction.

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

                               TABLE OF CONTENTS

<TABLE>
<S>                                                                        <C>
                                                                           PAGE
                                                                           ----
FUND HIGHLIGHTS......................................................        2
  Risk Factors and Special Characteristics...........................        2
FUND EXPENSES........................................................        4
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS.................................................        5
HOW THE FUND INVESTS.................................................        6
  Investment Objective and Policies..................................        6
  Other Investments..................................................        8
  Other Investment Information.......................................       15
  Investment Restrictions............................................       16
HOW THE FUND IS MANAGED..............................................       16
  Manager............................................................       16
  Distributor........................................................       17
  Portfolio Transactions.............................................       19
  Custodian and Transfer and Dividend Disbursing Agent...............       19
HOW THE FUND VALUES ITS SHARES.......................................       19
HOW THE FUND CALCULATES PERFORMANCE..................................       19
TAXES, DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS...................................       20
GENERAL INFORMATION..................................................       21
  Description of Shares..............................................       21
  Additional Information.............................................       22
SHAREHOLDER GUIDE....................................................       22
  How to Buy Shares of the Fund......................................       22
  Alternative Purchase Plan..........................................       23
  How to Sell Your Shares............................................       26
  Conversion Feature.................................................       29
  How to Exchange Your Shares........................................       30
  Shareholder Services...............................................       31
THE PRUDENTIAL MUTUAL FUND FAMILY....................................      A-1
</TABLE>

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

130A                                                                     440134B

                                      Class A:  743914202
                       CUSIP Nos.:    Class B:  743914103
                                      Class C:  743914301

PRUDENTIAL
U.S. GOVERNMENT
FUND
- -------------------

                                     [LOGO]
<PAGE>
                                   PROSPECTUS
                                   AUGUST 1,
                                      1994
<PAGE>
                        PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND
                      STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
                              DATED AUGUST 1, 1994

    Prudential  U.S.  Government Fund  (the  Fund) is  an  open-end, diversified
management investment company, or mutual fund, whose investment objective is  to
seek  a high total  return (capital appreciation plus  high current income). The
Fund will  seek  to  achieve  this objective  primarily  by  investing  in  U.S.
Government  securities, including U.S. Treasury Bills, Notes and Bonds and other
debt  securities  issued  by  the  U.S.  Treasury,  and  obligations  issued  or
guaranteed  by U.S. Government agencies or  instrumentalities. The Fund may also
purchase and sell put and call options on U.S. Government securities and  engage
in  transactions involving futures  contracts on U.S.  Government securities and
options on such futures.  There can be no  assurance that the Fund's  investment
objective will be achieved.

    The  Fund's address is One Seaport Plaza,  New York, New York 10292, and its
telephone number is (800) 225-1852.

    This Statement of Additional Information is  not a prospectus and should  be
read  in conjunction with the Fund's Prospectus, dated August 1, 1994, a copy of
which may be obtained from the Fund at the address noted above.

                               TABLE OF CONTENTS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                              CROSS-REFERENCE TO
                                                                                                     PAGE     PAGE IN PROSPECTUS
                                                                                                   ---------  -------------------
<S>                                                                                                <C>        <C>
Additional Investment Information................................................................        B-2               6
Investment Restrictions..........................................................................        B-8              16
Trustees and Officers............................................................................       B-10              16
Manager..........................................................................................       B-12              16
Distributor......................................................................................       B-14              17
Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage.............................................................       B-15              19
Purchase and Redemption of Fund Shares...........................................................       B-17              22
Shareholder Investment Account...................................................................       B-20              31
Net Asset Value..................................................................................       B-23              19
Performance Information..........................................................................       B-24              19
Taxes............................................................................................       B-25              20
Organization and Capitalization..................................................................       B-28              21
Custodian, Transfer and Dividend Disbursing Agent and Independent Accountants....................       B-28              19
Financial Statements.............................................................................       B-29              --
Independent Auditors' Report.....................................................................       B-44              --
Appendix.........................................................................................                         --
</TABLE>

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

130B                                                                     4401359
<PAGE>
                       ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT INFORMATION

    The  Fund's investment  objective is  to seek  a high  total return (capital
appreciation plus  high current  income). The  Fund will  seek to  achieve  this
objective  primarily by investing in  U.S. Government securities, including U.S.
Treasury Bills,  Notes, Bonds  and  other debt  securities  issued by  the  U.S.
Treasury  and obligations  issued or guaranteed  by U.S.  Government agencies or
instrumentalities.  There  can  be  no  assurance  that  the  Fund's  investment
objective will be achieved.

MORTGAGE-RELATED SECURITIES ISSUED BY U.S. GOVERNMENT INSTRUMENTALITIES

    Mortgages  backing the securities purchased by the Fund include conventional
thirty year  fixed rate  mortgages, graduated  payment mortgages,  fifteen  year
mortgages,  adjustable rate mortgages  and balloon payment  mortgages. A balloon
payment  mortgage-backed  security  is  an  amortized  mortgage  security   with
installments  of  principal  and  interest, the  last  installment  of  which is
predominately  principal.  All  of  these  mortgages  can  be  used  to   create
pass-through  securities. A pass-through  security is formed  when mortgages are
pooled together and undivided interests in the pool or pools are sold. The  cash
flow  from the mortgages is  passed through to the  holders of the securities in
the form of periodic payments of  interest, principal and prepayments (net of  a
service  fee).  Prepayments  occur when  the  holder of  an  individual mortgage
prepays the remaining principal before  the mortgage's scheduled maturity  date.
As  a result of the  pass-through of prepayments of  principal on the underlying
securities,  mortgage-backed  securities  are   often  subject  to  more   rapid
prepayment  of principal than their stated  maturity would indicate. Because the
prepayment characteristics of the underlying mortgages vary, it is not  possible
to  predict accurately the realized yield or  average life of a particular issue
of pass-through certificates.  Prepayment rates are  important because of  their
effect  on  the  yield  and price  of  the  securities.  Accelerated prepayments
adversely impact yields for pass-throughs  purchased at a premium. The  opposite
is true for pass-throughs purchased at a discount.

    GNMA   CERTIFICATES.  Certificates  of   the  Government  National  Mortgage
Association (GNMA Certificates) are  mortgage-backed securities, which  evidence
an  undivided interest in a  pool or pools of  mortgages. GNMA Certificates that
the Fund  purchases are  the  "modified pass-through"  type, which  entitle  the
holder  to receive timely payment of all  interest and principal payments due on
the mortgage pool, net of fees paid to the "issuer" and the Government  National
Mortgage Association (GNMA), regardless of whether or not the mortgagor actually
makes  the payment. The GNMA Certificates will  represent a PRO RATA interest in
one or more pools of the following types of mortgage loans: (i) fixed rate level
payment mortgage loans; (ii) fixed rate graduated payment mortgage loans;  (iii)
fixed rate growing equity mortgage loans: (iv) fixed rate mortgage loans secured
by  manufactured (mobile) homes;  (v) mortgage loans  on multifamily residential
properties under  construction; (vi)  mortgage  loans on  completed  multifamily
projects; (vii) fixed rate mortgage loans as to which escrowed funds are used to
reduce  the borrower's monthly  payments during the early  years of the mortgage
loans ("buydown"  mortgage  loans);  (viii)  mortgage  loans  that  provide  for
adjustments  in payments based on periodic changes in interest rates or in other
payment terms of the mortgage loans; and (ix) mortgage-backed serial notes.  All
of  these mortgage loans will be FHA Loans  or VA Loans and, except as otherwise
specified above,  will  be fully-amortizing  loans  secured by  first  liens  on
one-to-four-family housing units.

    GNMA  GUARANTEE. The National  Housing Act authorizes  GNMA to guarantee the
timely payment  of principal  and interest  on securities  backed by  a pool  of
mortgages  insured by the  Federal Housing Administration  (FHA) or the Farmers'
Home Administration (FMHA), or guaranteed  by the Veterans Administration  (VA).
The  GNMA guarantee is backed by the full faith and credit of the United States.
The GNMA is also empowered to  borrow without limitation from the U.S.  Treasury
if necessary to make any payments required under its guarantee.

    LIFE  OF GNMA CERTIFICATES. The average life of a GNMA Certificate is likely
to be  substantially  shorter  than  the  original  maturity  of  the  mortgages
underlying  the securities. Prepayments of  principal by mortgagors and mortgage
foreclosures will usually result in the return of the greater part of  principal
investment  long before the maturity of  the mortgages in the pool. Foreclosures
impose no risk to principal investment because of the GNMA guarantee, except  to
the  extent  that the  Fund  has purchased  the  certificates above  par  in the
secondary market.

    FHLMC SECURITIES. The  Federal Home  Loan Mortgage  Corporation (FHLMC)  was
created in 1970 through enactment of Title III of the Emergency Home Finance Act
of  1970. Its purpose is to promote development of a nationwide secondary market
in conventional residential mortgages.

                                      B-2
<PAGE>
    The FHLMC issues  two types  of mortgage  pass-through securities,  mortgage
participation  certificates (PCs)  and guaranteed  mortgage certificates (GMCs).
PCs resemble GNMA Certificates in  that each PC represents  a PRO RATA share  of
all  interest and principal payments  made and owed on  the underlying pool. The
FHMLC guarantees timely  monthly payment  of interest  on PCs  and the  ultimate
payment of principal.

    GMCs  also represent a  PRO RATA interest  in a pool  of mortgages. However,
these instruments pay interest semi-annually and return principal once a year in
guaranteed minimum payments. The  expected average life  of these securities  is
approximately ten years.

    FNMA  SECURITIES.  The  Federal  National  Mortgage  Association  (FNMA) was
established in 1938  to create a  secondary market in  mortgages insured by  the
FHA.

    FNMA    issues   guaranteed   mortgage   pass-through   certificates   (FNMA
Certificates). FNMA Certificates  resemble GNMA Certificates  in that each  FNMA
Certificate  represents a PRO RATA share  of all interest and principal payments
made and owed on the underlying pool. FNMA guarantees timely payment of interest
on FNMA Certificates and principal.

    ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE SECURITIES. The Fund will invest in adjustable rate
mortgage  securities  (ARMs),   which  are   pass-through  mortgage   securities
collateralized  by mortgages with adjustable rather than fixed rates. Generally,
ARMs have a specified maturity date  and amortize principal over their life.  In
periods  of declining interest rates, there is a reasonable likelihood that ARMs
will experience increased rates of  prepayment of principal. However, the  major
difference  between ARMs and fixed rate mortgage securities is that the interest
rate and the  rate of amortization  of principal of  ARMs can and  do change  in
accordance  with movements  in a  particular, pre-specified,  published interest
rate index.

    The amount of interest on an ARM is calculated by adding a specified amount,
the "margin," to the  index, subject to limitations  on the maximum and  minimum
interest that can be charged to the mortgagor during the life of the mortgage or
to  maximum and  minimum changes  to that interest  rate during  a given period.
Because the  interest rate  on ARMs  generally moves  in the  same direction  as
market  interest rates, the  market value of  ARMs tends to  be more stable than
that of long-term fixed rate securities.

    There are  two main  categories of  indices which  serve as  benchmarks  for
periodic  adjustments  to coupon  rates on  ARMs; those  based on  U.S. Treasury
securities and those derived from a calculated  measure such as a cost of  funds
index  or a moving average of  mortgage rates. Commonly utilized indices include
the  one-year  and  five-year  constant   maturity  Treasury  Note  rates,   the
three-month  Treasury  Bill  rate,  the 180-day  Treasury  Bill  rate,  rates on
longer-term Treasury securities, the 11th  District Federal Home Loan Bank  Cost
of Funds, the National Median Cost of Funds, the one-month or three-month London
Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), the prime rate of a specific bank, or commercial
paper  rates. Some indices, such as the one-year constant maturity Treasury Note
rate, closely mirror changes in market interest rate levels. Others, such as the
11th District Home Loan Bank Cost of Fund index (often related to ARMs issued by
FNMA), tend to lag changes  in market rate levels and  tend to be somewhat  less
volatile.

COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS

    Certain  issuers  of mortgage-backed  obligations (CMOs),  including certain
CMOs that have elected to be treated as Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduits
(REMICs), are not considered  investment companies pursuant  to a rule  recently
adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and the Fund may invest
in  the  securities  of such  issuers  without  the limitations  imposed  by the
Investment Company Act of  1940 (the Investment Company  Act) on investments  by
the  Fund in other investment companies. In  addition, in reliance on an earlier
SEC interpretation, the  Fund's investments  in certain  other qualifying  CMOs,
which  cannot or do not rely on the rule, are also not subject to the limitation
of the  Investment  Company  Act  on acquiring  interests  in  other  investment
companies.  In order to be able to rely on SEC's interpretation, these CMOs must
be unmanaged, fixed asset issuers, that (a) invest primarily in  mortgage-backed
securities,  (b) do not  issue redeemable securities,  (c) operate under general
exemptive orders exempting them  from all provisions  of the Investment  Company
Act  and (d) are not registered or regulated under the Investment Company Act as
investment companies. To the  extent that the Fund  selects CMOs or REMICs  that
cannot  rely on the Rule or do not meet the above requirements, the Fund may not
invest more than 10% of its assets in all such entities and may not acquire more
than 3% of the voting securities of any single such entity.

                                      B-3
<PAGE>
OTHER SECURITIES

    The Fund will invest in obligations of foreign banks and foreign branches of
U.S. banks only if after giving  effect to such investment all such  investments
would  constitute less than  10% of the  Fund's total assets  (determined at the
time of investment).  Investing in  securities of foreign  companies in  foreign
countries  involves  certain considerations  and risks  which are  not typically
associated with investing in  U.S. Government securities  and those of  domestic
companies.  Foreign companies are  not generally subject  to uniform accounting,
auditing and financial standards and requirements comparable to those applicable
to U.S.  companies.  There may  be  less publicly  available  information  about
foreign  companies  and governments  compared to  reports and  ratings published
about U.S. companies. Securities of some  foreign companies are less liquid  and
more  volatile  than  securities  of comparable  U.S.  companies,  and brokerage
commissions and  other transaction  costs on  foreign securities  exchanges  are
generally higher than in the United States.

OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS AND RELATED RISKS

    The  Fund may purchase put and call  options and sell covered put or covered
call options which are traded on registered securities exchanges (the Exchanges)
and may  also  engage  in  options transactions  with  primary  U.S.  Government
securities  dealers  recognized by  the Federal  Reserve Bank  of New  York (OTC
Options). The purchaser of a call option  has the right, for a specified  period
of  time, to purchase the securities subject  to the option at a specified price
(the exercise  price). By  writing a  call option,  the Fund  becomes  obligated
during  the  term  of the  option,  upon exercise  of  the option,  to  sell the
underlying securities to the  purchaser against receipt  of the exercise  price.
Conversely,  the purchaser of a put option has the right, for a specified period
of time, to sell the securities subject to  the option to the writer of the  put
at  a  specified exercise  price.  By writing  a  put option,  the  Fund becomes
obligated during the term  of the option to  purchase the securities  underlying
the option at the exercise price, upon exercise of the option.

    The  principal reason  for writing options  on a securities  portfolio is to
attempt to realize, through the receipt of premiums, a greater return than would
be realized on the underlying securities  alone. In return for the premium,  the
covered  call option  writer gives  up the opportunity  for profit  from a price
increase in the  underlying security  above the exercise  price so  long as  the
option  remains  open, but  retains the  risk of  loss should  the price  of the
security decline. Conversely, the put option writer gains a profit, in the  form
of  the premium, so long  as the price of  the underlying security remains above
the exercise  price,  but  assumes  an obligation  to  purchase  the  underlying
security from the buyer of the put option at the exercise price, even though the
security  may  fall below  the exercise  price,  at any  time during  the option
period. If an option expires,  the writer realizes a gain  in the amount of  the
premium.  Such a gain may, in the case of  a covered call option, be offset by a
decline in the market value of the underlying security during the option period.
If a call option is exercised, the writer realizes a gain or loss from the  sale
of  the  underlying security.  If a  put  option is  exercised, the  writer must
fulfill his  obligation to  purchase  the underlying  security at  the  exercise
price,  which will usually exceed the market value of the underlying security at
that time.

    The Fund writes only "covered" options. This means that so long as the  Fund
is  obligated as  the writer of  a call option,  it will (a)  own the underlying
securities subject to the option,  except that, in the  case of call options  on
U.S.  Treasury Bills,  the Fund  might own  U.S. Treasury  Bills of  a different
series from those underlying  the call option, but  with a principal amount  and
value  corresponding to the option contract amount  and a maturity date no later
than that  of the  securities deliverable  under the  call option,  (b) have  an
absolute  and immediate  right to acquire  the securities subject  to the option
without additional  cash  consideration upon  conversion  or exchange  of  other
securities  held in its portfolio,  (c) hold a call  option on the same security
with an exercise price no higher than the exercise price of the call sold or, if
higher,  the  Fund  deposits  and  maintains  the  differential  in  cash,  U.S.
Government   securities  or  other  liquid  high-grade  debt  obligations  in  a
segregated account with its custodian, State Street Bank and Trust Company  (the
Custodian),  or  (d) deposit  and maintain  with its  Custodian in  a segregated
account cash,  U.S.  Government  securities  or  other  liquid  high-grade  debt
obligations having a value at least equal to the fluctuating market value of the
securities  underlying  the call.  The Fund  will  be considered  "covered" with
respect to a put option it  writes if, so long as  the Fund is obligated as  the
writer of a put option, it will (a) deposit and maintain with its Custodian in a
segregated  account cash, U.S. Government  securities or other liquid high-grade
debt obligations having a value equal to  or greater than the exercise price  of
the  option or (b) own a put option  on the same security with an exercise price
the same or higher than the exercise price of the put option sold or, if  lower,
deposit  and maintain  the differential in  cash, U.S.  Government securities or
other liquid  high-grade  debt obligations  in  a segregated  account  with  its
Custodian.

    So  long  as the  obligation  of the  writer  continues, the  writer  may be
assigned an exercise  notice by the  broker-dealer through whom  the option  was
sold.  The exercise notice would require the writer to deliver, in the case of a
call, or take delivery of, in the

                                      B-4
<PAGE>
case of a put,  the underlying security against  payment of the exercise  price.
This  obligation terminates  upon expiration of  the option, or  at such earlier
time that the  writer effects a  closing purchase transaction  by purchasing  an
option  covering the same underlying security and having the same exercise price
and expiration date (of  the same series)  as the one  previously sold. Once  an
option  has  been  exercised, the  writer  may  not execute  a  closing purchase
transaction. To secure the obligation to deliver the underlying security in  the
case  of a call option, the  writer of the option is  required to pledge for the
benefit of the broker the underlying security or other assets in accordance with
the rules of the Options Clearing Corporation (the OCC), an institution  created
to  interpose itself between buyers and sellers of options. Technically, the OCC
assumes the other  side of every  purchase and sale  transaction on an  Exchange
and, by doing so, guarantees the transaction.

    To  the extent that  a secondary market  is available on  the Exchanges, the
covered option  writer  may  close out  options  it  has written  prior  to  the
assignment   of  an  exercise  notice  by  purchasing,  in  a  closing  purchase
transaction, an option covering the same underlying security and having the same
exercise price and expiration date (of the same series) as the option previously
written. If the  cost of  such a closing  purchase, plus  transaction costs,  is
greater  than the premium received upon  writing the original option, the writer
will incur a loss in the transaction.

    The Fund may also write straddles (I.E.,  a combination of a call and a  put
written  on the same security  at the same strike price  where the same issue of
the security is  considered "cover"  for both  the put  and the  call). In  such
cases,  the Fund will also segregate or deposit cash, U.S. Government securities
or liquid high-grade obligations equivalent to the amount, if any, by which  the
put  is "in the money". It is contemplated that the Fund's use of straddles will
be limited to 5% of the Fund's net assets (meaning that the securities used  for
cover  or segregated  as described above  will not  exceed 5% of  the Fund's net
assets at the time the straddle is written).

SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS APPLICABLE TO OPTIONS

    ON TREASURY BONDS AND NOTES. Because trading interest in Treasury Bonds  and
Notes  tends to center on the most recently auctioned issues, the Exchanges will
not indefinitely continue to introduce new series of options with expirations to
replace  expiring  options  on  particular  issues.  Instead,  the   expirations
introduced  at the commencement of options trading on a particular issue will be
allowed to run their course, with the  possible addition of a limited number  of
new  expirations as the original ones expire.  Options trading on each series of
Bonds or Notes will  thus be phased out  as new options are  listed on the  more
recent  issues, and  a full  range of  expiration dates  will not  ordinarily be
available for every series on which options are traded.

    ON TREASURY BILLS. Because the  deliverable Treasury Bill changes from  week
to  week, writers of  Treasury Bill call  options cannot provide  in advance for
their potential exercise  settlement obligations  by acquiring  and holding  the
underlying  security. However,  if the  Fund holds  a long  position in Treasury
Bills with a  principal amount corresponding  to the option  contract size,  the
Fund  may be hedged from a risk  standpoint. In addition, the Fund will maintain
in a segregated account with its Custodian Treasury Bills maturing no later than
those which would be deliverable  in the event of  an assignment of an  exercise
notice to ensure that it can meet its open option obligations.

    ON  GNMA CERTIFICATES. Options on GNMA Certificates are not currently traded
on any Exchange.  However, the Fund  engages in transactions  in OTC Options  on
GNMA  Certificates. Since the  remaining principal balance  of GNMA Certificates
declines each month as a result of mortgage payments, the Fund, as a writer of a
covered GNMA call holding GNMA Certificates  as "cover" to satisfy its  delivery
obligation  in the event of assignment of  an exercise notice, may find that its
GNMA Certificates no longer  have a sufficient  remaining principal balance  for
this  purpose. Should this  occur, the Fund  will enter into  a closing purchase
transaction or will purchase additional GNMA Certificates from the same pool (if
obtainable) or replacement  GNMA Certificates  in the  cash market  in order  to
remain covered.

    RISKS   PERTAINING  TO  THE  EXCHANGE-TRADED  OPTION  SECONDARY  MARKET.  An
Exchange-traded option position  may be  closed out  only on  an Exchange  which
provides  a secondary market for an option of the same series. Although the Fund
will generally purchase or write only  those options for which there appears  to
be  an active secondary  market, there is  no assurance that  a liquid secondary
market on an  Exchange will exist  for any particular  option at any  particular
time, and for some options no secondary market on an Exchange may exist. In such
event,  it might  not be possible  to effect closing  transactions in particular
options, with the result  that the Fund  would have to  exercise its options  in
order  to  realize any  profit  and may  incur  transaction costs  in connection
therewith. If the Fund, as a covered  call option writer, is unable to effect  a
closing  purchase transaction in a secondary market, it will not be able to sell
the underlying  security until  the  option expires  or  the Fund  delivers  the
underlying security upon exercise.

                                      B-5
<PAGE>
    Reasons  for the absence of a liquid secondary market on an Exchange include
the following:  (a)  insufficient  trading  interest  in  certain  options;  (b)
restrictions  on  transactions  imposed  by  an  Exchange;  (c)  trading  halts,
suspensions or other restrictions imposed with respect to particular classes  or
series  of  options or  underlying securities;  (d)  interruption of  the normal
operations on an Exchange;  (e) inadequacy of the  facilities of an Exchange  or
the  OCC to  handle current  trading volume; or  (f) a  decision by  one or more
Exchanges to discontinue the trading of options (or a particular class or series
of options), in which event  the secondary market on  that Exchange (or in  that
class  or series of options) would  cease to exist, although outstanding options
on that Exchange that had been issued by  the OCC as a result of trades on  that
Exchange  would generally  continue to be  exercisable in  accordance with their
terms.

    The hours  of trading  for options  on U.S.  Government securities  may  not
conform  to the hours during which the  underlying securities are traded. To the
extent that  the option  markets close  before the  markets for  the  underlying
securities,  significant  price  and  rate  movements  may  take  place  in  the
underlying markets that will not be reflected in the option markets.

FUTURES CONTRACTS ON U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

    Currently,  futures  contracts  on   U.S.  Government  securities   (futures
contracts  or futures) can be  purchased and sold with  respect to U.S. Treasury
Bonds, U.S. Treasury Notes and GNMA Certificates on the Chicago Board of  Trade,
with  respect  to U.S.  Treasury  Bonds and  Notes  on the  MidAmerica Commodity
Exchange, and with respect to U.S. Treasury Bills on the International  Monetary
Market Division of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Eurodollar futures contracts
are  currently traded on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. They enable purchasers
to obtain a fixed rate  for the lending of funds  and sellers to obtain a  fixed
rate for borrowings. The Fund would use Eurodollar futures contracts and options
thereon to hedge against changes in LIBOR, to which many interest rate swaps are
linked. See the discussion of "Options Transactions and Related Risks."

    The  Fund  neither  pays nor  receives  money  upon the  sale  of  a futures
contract. Instead,  when  the Fund  enters  into  a futures  contract,  it  will
initially  be required  to deposit  with its  Custodian for  the benefit  of the
futures broker an  amount of "initial  margin" of cash  or U.S. Treasury  Bills,
which  currently ranges from 1/10 of 1%  to 4% of the contract amount, depending
on the type  of contract. Initial  margin in futures  transactions is  different
from  margin in securities transactions in  that futures contract initial margin
does not  involve  the  borrowing  of  funds by  the  customer  to  finance  the
transactions. Rather, initial margin is in the nature of a good faith deposit on
the  contract which  is returned  to the  Fund upon  termination of  the futures
contract, assuming all contractual  obligations have been satisfied.  Subsequent
payments,  called variation margin, to and from the futures broker are made on a
daily basis as the market price of the futures contract fluctuates. At any  time
prior  to expiration of  the futures contract,  the Fund may  elect to close the
position by taking an  offsetting position which will  operate to terminate  the
Fund's  position  in  the  futures contract.  While  futures  contracts  on U.S.
Government securities provide  for the  delivery and  acceptance of  securities,
most futures contracts are terminated by entering into offsetting transactions.

    The  Fund may purchase  put and call  options on futures  contracts and sell
"covered" put and  call options  on futures contracts  that are  traded on  U.S.
commodity  exchanges. The  Fund is considered  "covered" with respect  to a call
option it writes on  a futures contract if  it (a) owns a  long position in  the
underlying  futures contract, (b) owns a security which is deliverable under the
futures contract,  or (c)  owns a  separate  call option  to purchase  the  same
futures contract at a price no higher than the exercise price of the call option
written  by  the  Fund  or,  if higher,  the  Fund  deposits  and  maintains the
differential in cash, U.S Government securities or other liquid high-grade  debt
obligations  in  a  segregated account  with  its  Custodian. The  Fund  will be
considered "covered"  with  respect to  a  put option  it  writes on  a  futures
contract  if  it (a)  segregates  and maintains  with  its Custodian  cash, U.S.
Government securities or other liquid  high-grade debt obligations at all  times
equal  in  value to  the  exercise price  of the  put  (less any  related margin
deposited), or  (b) owns  a put  option on  the same  futures contract  with  an
exercise price as high or higher than the price of the contract held by the Fund
or,  if lower, the  Fund deposits and  maintains the differential  in cash, U.S.
Government  securities  or  other  liquid  high-grade  debt  obligations  in   a
segregated  account with its Custodian. There is  no limitation on the amount of
the Fund's assets which can be placed in the segregated accounts.

    RISKS PERTAINING TO THE FUTURES MARKETS. Successful use of futures contracts
and options  thereon  by the  Fund  is subject  to  the ability  of  the  Fund's
investment  adviser to predict correctly movements  in the direction of interest
rates and other factors  affecting markets for securities.  For example, if  the
Fund  has hedged against the possibility of  an increase in interest rates which
would adversely affect the price of securities in its portfolio and the price of
such securities increases instead, the Fund will lose part or all of the benefit
of the increased value of its securities because it will have offsetting  losses
in its futures positions. In

                                      B-6
<PAGE>
addition,  in such situations, if  the Fund has insufficient  cash to meet daily
variation margin  requirements, it  may have  to sell  securities to  meet  such
requirements.  Such sales of securities may be,  but will not necessarily be, at
increased prices which  reflect the  rising market. The  Fund may  have to  sell
securities at a time when it is disadvantageous to do so.

    The  hours of trading of futures contracts on U.S. Government securities and
options thereon may not  conform to the  hours during which  the Fund may  trade
such  securities. To the extent  that the futures markets  close before the U.S.
Government securities markets,  significant price  and rate  movements can  take
place  in the U.S. Government securities markets that cannot be reflected in the
futures markets.  Further, additional  futures trading  sessions may  result  in
significant  price movements, exercises of positions  and margin calls at a time
when the U.S. Government securities markets are not open.

INTEREST RATE TRANSACTIONS

    The Fund may  enter into interest  rate swaps, on  either an asset-based  or
liability-based   basis,  depending  on  whether   hedging  its  assets  or  its
liabilities, and will  usually enter into  interest rate swaps  on a net  basis,
I.E.,  the two payment streams netted out, with the Fund receiving or paying, as
the case  may be,  only the  net amount  of the  two payments.  Inasmuch as  the
hedging  transactions  are entered  into for  good  faith hedging  purposes, the
adviser  and  the  Fund  believe  such  obligations  do  not  constitute  senior
securities  and,  accordingly,  will not  treat  them  as being  subject  to its
borrowing restrictions. The  net amount  of the excess,  if any,  of the  Fund's
obligations  over its entitlements with respect  to each interest rate swap will
be accrued on  a daily basis  and an amount  of cash or  liquid high-grade  debt
securities  having an aggregate  net asset value  at least equal  to the accrued
excess will be maintained in a segregated account by a custodian that  satisfies
the  requirements of  the Investment  Company Act. To  the extent  that the Fund
enters into interest rate swaps on other than a net basis, the amount maintained
in a segregated account will  be the full amount  of the Fund's obligations,  if
any,  with respect to  such interest rate  swaps, accrued on  a daily basis. The
Fund will not  enter into any  interest rate swaps  unless the unsecured  senior
debt  or the claims-paying  ability of the  other party thereto  is rated in the
highest  rating  category   of  at  least   one  nationally  recognized   rating
organization  at  the time  of entering  into  such transaction.  If there  is a
default by the other party to such a transaction, the Fund will have contractual
remedies pursuant to the agreement related  to the transaction. The swap  market
has  grown  substantially in  recent  years with  a  large number  of  banks and
investment banking  firms acting  both  as principals  and as  agents  utilizing
standardized  swap  documentation.  As  a result,  the  swap  market  has become
relatively liquid.

    The use  of interest  rate  swaps is  a  highly speculative  activity  which
involves  investment techniques and  risks different from  those associated with
ordinary portfolio  securities transactions.  If incorrect  in its  forecast  of
market  values,  interest rates  and  other applicable  factors,  the investment
performance of the Fund would  diminish compared to what  it would have been  if
this investment technique was never used.

    The  Fund may only  enter into interest  rate swaps to  hedge its portfolio.
Interest rate  swaps  do  not  involve  the  delivery  of  securities  or  other
underlying  assets or principal.  Accordingly, the risk of  loss with respect to
interest rate swaps is limited to the  net amount of interest payments that  the
Fund  is contractually obligated to make. If the other party to an interest rate
swap defaults, the Fund's risk  of loss consists of  the net amount of  interest
payments that the Fund is contractually entitled to receive. Since interest rate
swaps  are individually  negotiated, the Fund  expects to  achieve an acceptable
degree of correlation between  its rights to receive  interest on its  portfolio
securities  and its rights and obligations  to receive and pay interest pursuant
to interest rate swaps.

REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS

    The Fund's repurchase agreements will  be collateralized by U.S.  Government
obligations.  The Fund will enter into repurchase transactions only with parties
meeting creditworthiness standards approved by  the Fund's Trustees. The  Fund's
investment  adviser will monitor the creditworthiness of such parties, under the
general supervision of the Trustees. In the event of a default or bankruptcy  by
a seller, the Fund will promptly seek to liquidate the collateral. To the extent
that  the  proceeds from  any  sale of  such collateral  upon  a default  in the
obligation to  repurchase are  less than  the repurchase  price, the  Fund  will
suffer a loss.

    The  Fund participates  in a joint  repurchase agreement  account with other
investment companies managed  by Prudential Mutual  Fund Management, Inc.  (PMF)
pursuant  to an order of the SEC. On a daily basis, any uninvested cash balances
of the  Fund may  be aggregated  with  those of  such investment  companies  and
invested  in one  or more repurchase  agreements. Each fund  participates in the
income earned or accrued  in the joint  account based on  the percentage of  its
investment.

                                      B-7
<PAGE>
ILLIQUID SECURITIES

    The  Fund  may not  invest more  than 15%  of its  net assets  in repurchase
agreements which have a maturity of longer than seven days or in other  illiquid
securities, including securities that are illiquid by virtue of the absence of a
readily  available  market  or  legal  or  contractual  restrictions  on resale.
Historically,  illiquid   securities  have   included  securities   subject   to
contractual  or  legal  restrictions  on  resale  because  they  have  not  been
registered under  the  Securities Act  of  1933, as  amended  (Securities  Act),
securities  which are otherwise not readily marketable and repurchase agreements
having a maturity  of longer  than seven days.  Securities which  have not  been
registered  under the  Securities Act are  referred to as  private placements or
restricted securities  and are  purchased directly  from the  issuer or  in  the
secondary  market. Mutual  funds do not  typically hold a  significant amount of
these restricted  or other  illiquid  securities because  of the  potential  for
delays on resale and uncertainty in valuation. Limitations on resale may have an
adverse  effect on the  marketability of portfolio securities  and a mutual fund
might be unable to dispose of  restricted or other illiquid securities  promptly
or  at  reasonable prices  and  might thereby  experience  difficulty satisfying
redemptions within seven days.  A mutual fund might  also have to register  such
restricted  securities  in  order to  dispose  of them  resulting  in additional
expense and delay. Adverse market conditions could impede such a public offering
of securities.

    In recent years,  however, a  large institutional market  has developed  for
certain  securities that are  not registered under  the Securities Act including
repurchase  agreements,   commercial   paper,  foreign   securities,   municipal
securities,  convertible securities and corporate bonds and notes. Institutional
investors depend on an efficient institutional market in which the  unregistered
security  can be readily resold or on an  issuer's ability to honor a demand for
repayment. The fact that there are  contractual or legal restrictions on  resale
to  the general public or  to certain institutions may  not be indicative of the
liquidity of such investments.

    Rule 144A  under  the Securities  Act  allows for  a  broader  institutional
trading  market for securities otherwise subject to restriction on resale to the
general public.  Rule 144A  establishes a  "safe harbor"  from the  registration
requirements  of  the  Securities  Act  for  resales  of  certain  securities to
qualified institutional  buyers. The  investment  adviser anticipates  that  the
market  for certain restricted securities such as institutional commercial paper
and foreign securities will  expand further as a  result of this regulation  and
the  development of automated systems for  the trading, clearance and settlement
of unregistered securities of domestic and  foreign issuers, such as the  PORTAL
System sponsored by the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.

    Restricted  securities eligible for  resale pursuant to  Rule 144A under the
Securities Act  and commercial  paper for  which there  is a  readily  available
market  will not be deemed  to be illiquid. The  investment adviser will monitor
the liquidity of such  restricted securities subject to  the supervision of  the
Board of Directors. In reaching liquidity decisions, the investment adviser will
consider,  INTER ALIA,  the following factors:  (1) the frequency  of trades and
quotes for the security; (2) the number  of dealers wishing to purchase or  sell
the   security  and  the  number  of  other  potential  purchasers;  (3)  dealer
undertakings to make a market in the security and (4) the nature of the security
and the nature of the  marketplace trades (E.G., the  time needed to dispose  of
the  security,  the  method  of  soliciting  offers  and  the  mechanics  of the
transfer). In addition, in order for commercial paper that is issued in reliance
on Section 4(2) of the  Securities Act to be considered  liquid, (i) it must  be
rated  in one of  the two highest  rating categories by  at least two nationally
recognized statistical rating organizations (NRSRO), or if only one NRSRO  rates
the  securities, by that NRSRO, or, if  unrated, be of comparable quality in the
view of the investment  adviser; and (ii)  it must not  be "traded flat"  (I.E.,
without  accrued interest) or in default as to principal or interest. Repurchase
agreements subject to demand are deemed to  have a maturity equal to the  notice
period.

                            INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

    The  following restrictions  are fundamental  policies. Fundamental policies
are those which  cannot be  changed without  the approval  of the  holders of  a
majority  of the Fund's outstanding voting securities. A "majority of the Fund's
outstanding voting  securities,"  when  used in  this  Statement  of  Additional
Information,  means the lesser of (i) 67%  of the voting shares represented at a
meeting at which more than 50% of  the outstanding voting shares are present  in
person  or represented by proxy or (ii)  more than 50% of the outstanding voting
shares.

    The Fund may not:

    1.  Purchase securities on margin  (but the Fund may obtain such  short-term
credits  as may be necessary for the  clearance of transactions); the deposit or
payment by the Fund of initial  or variation margin in connection with  interest
rate  futures contracts  or related options  transactions is  not considered the
purchase of a security on margin.

                                      B-8
<PAGE>
    2.  Make  short sales  of securities or  maintain a  short position,  except
short  sales "against the box" (the purchase of protective puts, as described in
the Prospectus,  is  not  a  short position  for  purposes  of  this  investment
restriction).

    3.   Issue senior securities, borrow money or pledge its assets, except that
the Fund may borrow up to 20% of the value of its total assets (calculated  when
the  loan is made) for temporary, extraordinary or emergency purposes or for the
clearance of transactions. The  Fund may pledge  up to 20% of  the value of  its
total  assets to secure  such borrowings. For purposes  of this restriction, the
purchase or sale of securities on  a when-issued or delayed delivery basis,  the
purchase of securities subject to repurchase agreements, collateral arrangements
with  respect to interest rate  swap transactions, reverse repurchase agreements
or dollar roll  transactions or the  purchase or sale  of options and  financial
futures contracts or options thereon, are not deemed to be a pledge of assets or
the  issuance of a senior security;  and neither such arrangements, the purchase
or  sale  of  options,  financial  futures  contracts  or  related  options  nor
obligations  of  the  Fund to  the  Trustees pursuant  to  deferred compensation
arrangements, are deemed to be the issuance of a senior security.

    4.  Purchase any  security (other than obligations  of the U.S.  Government,
its  agencies, or instrumentalities) if as a  result: (i) with respect to 75% of
the Fund's total assets, more than 5% of the Fund's total assets (determined  at
the time of investment) would then be invested in securities of a single issuer,
or  (ii) 25%  or more  of the  Fund's total  assets (determined  at the  time of
investment) would be invested in a single industry.

    5.  Purchase any security if as a result the Fund would then hold more  than
10% of the outstanding voting securities of an issuer.

    6.   Purchase any security if as a result the Fund would then have more than
5% of  its total  assets (taken  at  current value)  invested in  securities  of
companies  (including predecessors) less  than three years  old, except that the
Fund  may  invest  in   the  securities  of  any   U.S.  Government  agency   or
instrumentality,   and  in  any  security  guaranteed   by  such  an  agency  or
instrumentality.

    7.   Buy  or sell  commodities  or commodity  contracts  or real  estate  or
interests  in real estate, except it may  purchase and sell securities which are
secured by real  estate, securities of  companies which invest  or deal in  real
estate,  futures contracts on U.S. Government securities and options thereon and
other financial futures contracts and options thereon.

    8.  Act as  underwriter except to  the extent that,  in connection with  the
disposition of portfolio securities, it may be deemed to be an underwriter under
certain federal securities laws.

    9.  Make investments for the purpose of exercising control or management.

    10. Invest in securities of other registered investment companies, except by
purchases  in the open market involving only customary brokerage commissions and
as a result of  which not more than  5% of its total  assets (determined at  the
time of investment) would be invested in such securities, or except as part of a
merger, consolidation or other acquisition.

    11.  Invest  in  interests  in  oil, gas  or  other  mineral  exploration or
development programs.

    12. Make loans, except (i) through  repurchase agreements and (ii) loans  of
portfolio securities limited to 30% of the Fund's total assets.

    13.  Purchase warrants if as a result the  Fund would then have more than 5%
of its total assets (determined at the time of investment) invested in warrants.

    14. Write, purchase or sell puts, calls or combinations thereof, or purchase
or sell futures contracts or related options, except that the Fund may write put
and call options on U.S. Government securities, purchase put and call options on
U.S. Government  securities  and purchase  or  sell futures  contracts  on  U.S.
Government  securities and purchase or sell options thereon, as well as purchase
or sell other financial futures contracts and related options thereon.

    In order to comply with certain state "blue sky" restrictions, the Fund will
not as a matter of  operating policy purchase the  securities of any one  issuer
if,  to the knowledge  of the Fund,  any officer or  Trustee of the  Fund or the
Fund's administrator or the Fund's investment  adviser owns more than 1/2 of  1%
of the outstanding securities of such issuer, and such officers and Trustees who
own  more than 1/2  of 1% own in  the aggregate more than  5% of the outstanding
securities of such issuer.

    Although not  a  fundamental  policy,  the Fund  has  agreed  with  a  state
securities  commission that the Fund will limit its investment in warrants which
are not listed on the New York Stock Exchange or the American Stock Exchange  to
no  more than 2%  of the value  of its total  assets (determined at  the time of
investment).

                                      B-9
<PAGE>
    Whenever any fundamental investment policy or investment restriction  states
a maximum percentage of the Fund's assets, it is intended that if the percentage
limitation  is  met  at the  time  the investment  is  made. A  later  change in
percentage resulting  from  changing total  or  net  asset values  will  not  be
considered  a violation of  such policy. However,  in the event  that the Fund's
asset coverage for borrowings falls below 300%, the Fund will take prompt action
to reduce its borrowings, as required by applicable law.

                             TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    POSITION                                PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS
NAME AND ADDRESS                    WITH FUND                              DURING PAST FIVE YEARS
- ---------------------------  -----------------------  -----------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>                      <C>
Stephen C. Eyre              Trustee                  Executive Director, The John A. Hartford Foundation, (charitable
c/o Prudential Mutual Fund                             foundation) (since May 1985); Director of Faircom, Inc., Trustee
Management, Inc.                                       Emeritus of Pace University.
One Seaport Plaza
New York, NY

Delayne Dedrick Gold         Trustee                  Marketing and Management Consultant.
c/o Prudential Mutual Fund
Management, Inc.
One Seaport Plaza
New York, NY

Don G. Hoff                  Trustee                  Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Intertec, Inc.
c/o Prudential Mutual Fund                             (investments) since 1980; Director of Innovative Capital
Management, Inc.                                       Management Inc., the Asia Pacific Fund, Inc. and The Greater
One Seaport Plaza                                      China Fund, Inc.
New York, NY

*Harry A. Jacobs, Jr.        Trustee                  Senior Director (since January 1986) of Prudential Securities
One Seaport Plaza                                      Incorporated (Prudential Securities); formerly Interim Chairman
New York, NY                                           and Chief Executive Officer of Prudential Mutual Fund Management
                                                       Inc. (PMF)(June-September 1993); Chairman of the Board of
                                                       Prudential Securities (1982-1985); Chairman and Chief Executive
                                                       Officer of Bache Group Inc. (1977-1982); Trustee of The Trudeau
                                                       Institute; Director of The First Australia Fund, Inc., The First
                                                       Australia Prime Income Fund, Inc., The Global Government Plus
                                                       Fund, Inc., The Global Yield Fund, Inc. and the Center for
                                                       National Policy.

Sidney R. Knafel             Trustee                  Managing Partner of SRK Management Company (investments) since
c/o Prudential Mutual Fund                             1981; Chairman of Insight Communications Company, L.P. and
Management, Inc.                                       Microbiological Associates, Inc.; Director of Cellular
One Seaport Plaza                                      Communications, Inc., Cellular Communications International,
New York, NY                                           Inc., Cellular Communications of Puerto Rico Inc., IGENE
                                                       Biotechnology, Inc., International CabelTel Incorporated,
                                                       Medical Imaging Centers of America, Inc. and a number of private
                                                       companies.

Robert E. LaBlanc            Trustee                  President of Robert E. LaBlanc Associates, Inc.
c/o Prudential Mutual Fund                             (telecommunications) since 1981; Director of Contel Cellular,
Management, Inc.                                       Inc., M/A-COM, Inc., Storage Technology Corporation, TIE
One Seaport Plaza                                      communications, Inc. and Tribune Company; Trustee of Manhattan
New York, NY                                           College.
<FN>
- ------------
* Interested director, as  defined in the Investment  Company Act, by reason  of
his affiliation with Prudential Securities or PMF.
</TABLE>

                                      B-10
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    POSITION                                PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS
NAME AND ADDRESS                    WITH FUND                              DURING PAST FIVE YEARS
- ---------------------------  -----------------------  -----------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>                      <C>
*Lawrence C. McQuade         President and Trustee    Vice Chairman of PMF (since 1988) and Managing Director,
One Seaport Plaza                                      Investment Banking of Prudential Securities (1988-1991);
New York, NY                                           Director, BUNZL, P.L.C. (since June 1991); Director, Quixote
                                                       Corporation (since February 1992); formerly Director of Crazy
                                                       Eddie Inc. (1987-1990) of Kaiser Tech., Ltd., Kaiser Aluminum
                                                       and Chemical Corp. (March 1987-November 1988); formerly
                                                       Executive Vice President and Director of W. R. Grace & Co;
                                                       President and Director of The High Yield Income Fund, Inc., The
                                                       Global Yield Fund, Inc. and The Global Government Plus Fund,
                                                       Inc.

Thomas A. Owens, Jr.         Trustee                  Consultant.
c/o Prudential Mutual Fund
Management, Inc.
One Seaport Plaza
New York, NY

*Richard A. Redeker          Trustee                  President, Chief Executive Officer and Director (since October
One Seaport Plaza                                      1993); Prudential Mutual Fund Management, Inc. (PMF); Executive
New York, NY                                           Vice President, Director and Member of the Operating Committee
                                                       (since October 1933); Prudential Securities Incorporated
                                                       (Prudential Securities); Director (since October 1993) of
                                                       Prudential Securities Group, Inc. (PSG). Formerly Senior
                                                       Executive Vice President and Director of Kemper Financial
                                                       Services, Inc. (September 1978-September 1993); Director of The
                                                       Global Government Plus Fund, Inc. The Global Yield Fund, Inc.
                                                       and The High Yield Income Fund, Inc.

Clay T. Whitehead            Trustee                  President of National Exchange Inc. (since May 1983).
c/o Prudential Mutual Fund
Management, Inc.
One Seaport Plaza
New York, NY

Robert F. Gunia              Vice President           Director (since January 1989), Chief Administrative Officer
One Seaport Plaza                                      (since August 1990) and Executive Vice President, Treasurer and
New York, NY                                           Chief Financial Officer (since June 1987) of PMF; Senior Vice
                                                       President (since March 1987) of Prudential Securities; Vice
                                                       President and Director of The Asia Pacific Fund, Inc. (since May
                                                       1989).

S. Jane Rose                 Secretary                Senior Vice President (since January 1991), Senior Counsel (since
One Seaport Plaza                                      June 1987) and First Vice President (June 1987-December 1990) of
New York, NY                                           PMF; Senior Vice President and Senior Counsel of Prudential
                                                       Securities (since July 1992); formerly Vice President and
                                                       Associate General Counsel of Prudential Securities.
<FN>
- ------------
*  Interested director, as defined  in the Investment Company  Act, by reason of
his affiliation with Prudential Securities or PMF.
</TABLE>

                                      B-11
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    POSITION                                PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS
NAME AND ADDRESS                    WITH FUND                              DURING PAST FIVE YEARS
- ---------------------------  -----------------------  -----------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>                      <C>
Susan C. Cote                Treasurer and Principal  Senior Vice President (since January 1989) and First Vice
One Seaport Plaza             Financial and            President (June 1987-December 1988) of PMF; Senior Vice
New York, NY                  Accounting Officer       President (since January 1992) and Vice President (January
                                                       1986-December 1991) of Prudential Securities.

Domenick Pugliese            Assistant Secretary      Vice President (since June 1992) and Associate General Counsel
One Seaport Plaza                                      (since March 1992) of PMF; Vice President and Associate General
New York, NY                                           Counsel of Prudential Securities (since July 1992); prior
                                                       thereto, associated with the law firm of Battle Fowler.
</TABLE>

    Trustees and officers of the Fund are also trustees, directors and  officers
of  some  or all  of the  other investment  companies distributed  by Prudential
Securities or Prudential Mutual Fund Distributors, Inc. (PMFD).

    The officers  conduct and  supervise the  daily business  operations of  the
Fund,  while  the  Trustees, in  addition  to  their functions  set  forth under
"Manager" and "Distributor," review such actions and decide on general policy.

    The Fund pays each of  its Trustees who is not  an affiliated person of  the
Manager  annual  compensation of  $7,500  in addition  to  certain out-of-pocket
expenses. The chairman of the Audit Committee receives an additional $1,500  per
year.

    As  of June  17, 1994, the  Trustees and officers  of the Fund,  as a group,
owned less than 1% of the outstanding shares of beneficial interest of the Fund.

    Trustees may  receive  their  Trustees'  fees pursuant  to  a  deferred  fee
agreement  with the  Fund. Under  the terms of  the agreement,  the Fund accrues
daily the amount of Trustees' fees which accrue interest at a rate equivalent to
the prevailing rate applicable to 90-day U.S. Treasury Bills at the beginning of
each calendar quarter  or at  the daily  rate of return  of the  Fund (the  Fund
rate).  Payment of the interest so accrued  is also deferred and accruals become
payable at the option of the Trustee. The Fund's obligation to make payments  of
deferred Trustees' fees, together with interest thereon, is a general obligation
of the Fund.

    As  of June 17, 1994, Prudential Securities  was the record holder for other
beneficial owners of 420,584 Class A shares (or 57.5% of the outstanding Class A
shares) and  9,401,978 Class  B shares  (or  64.0% of  the outstanding  Class  B
shares)  of the Fund. In  the event of any  meetings of shareholders, Prudential
Securities will forward,  or cause  the forwarding  of, proxy  materials to  the
beneficial owners for which it is the record holder.

                                    MANAGER

    The  manager of the Fund is Prudential  Mutual Fund Management, Inc. (PMF or
the Manager), One Seaport Plaza, New York, New York 10292. PMF serves as manager
to all of the other investment companies that, together with the Fund,  comprise
the  "Prudential Mutual  Funds." See "How  the Fund is  Managed--Manager" in the
Prospectus. As of  June 30, 1994  PMF managed and/or  administered open-end  and
closed-end  management  investment companies  with  assets of  approximately $47
billion and, according  to the  Investment Company  Institute, as  of April  30,
1994,  the Prudential Mutual Funds were the  12th largest family of mutual funds
in the United States.

    Pursuant  to  the  Management  Agreement  with  the  Fund  (the   Management
Agreement),  PMF,  subject to  the  supervision of  the  Fund's Trustees  and in
conformity with the  stated policies of  the Fund, manages  both the  investment
operations  of the Fund  and the composition of  the Fund's portfolio, including
the purchase,  retention,  disposition and  loan  of securities.  In  connection
therewith,  PMF is obligated to keep certain  books and records of the Fund. PMF
also administers  the Fund's  corporate affairs  and, in  connection  therewith,
furnishes the Fund with office facilities, together with those ordinary clerical
and  bookkeeping services which are not being furnished by State Street Bank and
Trust Company, the Fund's custodian,  and Prudential Mutual Fund Services,  Inc.
(PMFS or the Transfer Agent), the Fund's transfer and dividend disbursing agent.
The management services of PMF for the Fund are not exclusive under the terms of
the  Management  Agreement  and PMF  is  free  to, and  does,  render management
services to others.

    For its services, PMF receives, pursuant to the Management Agreement, a  fee
at  an annual rate of .50 of 1% of  the Fund's average daily net assets. The fee
is computed daily and  payable monthly. The  Management Agreement also  provides
that,  in the  event the expenses  of the Fund  (including the fees  of PMF, but
excluding  interest,  taxes,  brokerage   commissions,  distribution  fees   and
litigation  and indemnification  expenses and  other extraordinary  expenses not
incurred in the ordinary course of the

                                      B-12
<PAGE>
Fund's business) for any fiscal year exceed the lowest applicable annual expense
limitation established and enforced pursuant  to the statutes or regulations  of
any  jurisdiction in which the  Fund's shares are qualified  for offer and sale,
the compensation  due to  PMF will  be reduced  by the  amount of  such  excess.
Reductions  in excess of the  total compensation payable to  PMF will be paid by
PMF to the Fund. No such reductions  were required during the fiscal year  ended
October 31, 1993. Currently, the Fund believes that the most restrictive expense
limitation of state securities commissions is 2 1/2% of the Fund's average daily
net  assets up to  $30 million, 2%  of the next  $70 million of  such assets and
1 1/2% of such assets in excess of $100 million.

    In connection with its management of  the business affairs of the Fund,  PMF
bears the following expenses:

    (a)  the salaries and expenses of all of its and the Fund's personnel except
the fees and expenses of Trustees who  are not affiliated persons of PMF or  the
Fund's investment adviser;

    (b)  all expenses incurred by PMF or by the Fund in connection with managing
the ordinary course of the Fund's business, other than those assumed by the Fund
as described below; and

    (c) the costs and expenses payable to The Prudential Investment  Corporation
(PIC) pursuant to the subadvisory agreement between PMF and PIC (the Subadvisory
Agreement).

    Under the terms of the Management Agreement, the Fund is responsible for the
payment  of the following expenses: (a) the fees payable to the Manager, (b) the
fees and expenses of Trustees who are  not affiliated persons of the Manager  or
the  Fund's  investment  adviser,  (c)  the fees  and  certain  expenses  of the
Custodian and  Transfer and  Dividend Disbursing  Agent, including  the cost  of
providing   records  to  the  Manager  in  connection  with  its  obligation  of
maintaining required records of the Fund  and of pricing the Fund's shares,  (d)
the  charges and expenses  of legal counsel and  independent accountants for the
Fund, (e) brokerage commissions  and any issue or  transfer taxes chargeable  to
the  Fund  in connection  with its  securities transactions,  (f) all  taxes and
corporate fees payable by the Fund to governmental agencies, (g) the fees of any
trade associations of  which the Fund  may be a  member, (h) the  cost of  stock
certificates  representing  shares of  the Fund,  (i) the  cost of  fidelity and
liability insurance, (j) certain organization expenses of the Fund and the  fees
and  expenses involved in  registering and maintaining  registration of the Fund
and of its shares with the SEC,  registering the Fund and qualifying its  shares
under  state  securities laws,  including the  preparation  and printing  of the
Fund's registration statements and prospectuses for such purposes, (k) allocable
communications expenses with respect  to investor services  and all expenses  of
shareholders'  and  Trustees' meetings  and of  preparing, printing  and mailing
reports, proxy  statements  and  prospectuses  to  shareholders  in  the  amount
necessary   for   distribution   to  the   shareholders,   (l)   litigation  and
indemnification expenses and  other extraordinary expenses  not incurred in  the
ordinary course of the Fund's business and (m) distribution fees.

    The  Management Agreement provides that PMF will not be liable for any error
of judgment or for any loss suffered by the Fund in connection with the  matters
to  which the Management Agreement relates, except a loss resulting from willful
misfeasance, bad  faith, gross  negligence or  reckless disregard  of duty.  The
Management  Agreement provides that it will terminate automatically if assigned,
and that it may be terminated without penalty by either party upon not more than
60 days' nor less  than 30 days' written  notice. The Management Agreement  will
continue  in  effect for  a  period of  more  than two  years  from the  date of
execution only so  long as such  continuance is specifically  approved at  least
annually in conformity with the Investment Company Act. The Management Agreement
was  last approved  by the  Trustees of  the Fund,  including a  majority of the
Trustees who are not parties to the  contract or interested persons of any  such
party  as  defined  in  the  Investment  Company Act  on  June  6,  1994  and by
shareholders of the Fund on February 25, 1988.

    For the  fiscal years  ended October  31, 1993,  1992 and  1991, PMF  earned
management fees of $842,229, $791,342 and $852,897, respectively.

    PMF  has entered into  a Subadvisory Agreement with  PIC (the Subadviser), a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Prudential.  The Subadvisory Agreement provides  that
PIC  will furnish investment advisory services in connection with the management
of the Fund. In connection therewith, PIC is obligated to keep certain books and
records of the  Fund. PMF continues  to have responsibility  for all  investment
advisory  services  pursuant to  the Management  Agreement and  supervises PIC's
performance of such services. PIC is reimbursed by PMF for the reasonable  costs
and expenses incurred by PIC in furnishing services to PMF.

    The  Subadvisory Agreement  was last approved  by the  Trustees, including a
majority of  the Trustees  who are  not parties  to the  contract or  interested
persons  of any such party as defined in  the Investment Company Act, on June 6,
1994 and was approved by  the shareholders of the Fund  at a Special Meeting  of
Shareholders held on February 25, 1988.

                                      B-13
<PAGE>
    The  Subadvisory Agreement provides  that it will terminate  in the event of
its  assignment  (as  defined  in  the  Investment  Company  Act)  or  upon  the
termination  of  the  Management  Agreement. The  Subadvisory  Agreement  may be
terminated by the Fund, PMF or PIC upon not more than 60 days', nor less than 30
days', written notice. The Subadvisory Agreement provides that it will  continue
in effect for a period of more than two years from its execution only so long as
such  continuance is specifically approved at  least annually in accordance with
the requirements of the Investment Company Act.

    The Manager and the Subadviser  (The Prudential Investment Corporation)  are
indirect  subsidiaries of The Prudential which, as of December 31, 1993, was the
largest insurance company in North America.  Prudential has been engaged in  the
insurance  business since 1875. In July  1993, Institutional Investor ranked The
Prudential the  third largest  institutional money  manager of  the 300  largest
money management organizations in the United States as of December 31, 1992.

                                  DISTRIBUTOR

    Prudential  Mutual Fund  Distributors, Inc.  (PMFD), One  Seaport Plaza, New
York, New York 10292, acts as the distributor of the Class A shares of the Fund.
Prudential Securities Incorporated, One Seaport Plaza, New York, New York  10292
(Prudential  Securities), acts  as the  distributor of the  Class B  and Class C
shares of the Fund.

    Pursuant to separate Distribution and Service  Plans (the Class A Plan,  the
Class  B Plan and the Class C Plan, collectively, the Plans) adopted by the Fund
under Rule  12b-1 under  the Investment  Company Act  and separate  distribution
agreements   (the  Distribution  Agreements),  PMFD  and  Prudential  Securities
(collectively the Distributor)  incur the  expenses of  distributing the  Fund's
Class  A,  Class  B and  Class  C shares,  respectively.  See "How  the  Fund is
Managed--Distributor" in the Prospectus.

    Prior to January 22, 1990,  the Fund offered only  one class of shares  (the
then  existing Class B shares).  On October 17, 1989,  the Trustees, including a
majority of the Trustees who are not interested persons of the Fund and who have
no direct or  indirect financial interest  in the  operation of the  Class A  or
Class  B  Plan  or in  any  agreement related  to  either Plan  (the  Rule 12b-1
Trustees), at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on each Plan, adopted a
new plan of distribution for the Class A  shares of the Fund (the Class A  Plan)
and  approved an amended and  restated plan of distribution  with respect to the
Class B shares of  the Fund (the Class  B Plan). On June  3, 1993, the Board  of
Directors, including a majority of the Rule 12b-1 Directors, at a meeting called
for  the purpose of voting  on each Plan, approved  the continuance of the Plans
and Distribution Agreements and approved modifications of the Fund's Class A and
Class B Plans and Distribution Agreements to conform them with recent amendments
to the National  Association of  Securities Dealers, Inc.  (NASD) maximum  sales
charge  rule described below. As so modified, the Class A Plan provides that (i)
up to .25 of 1%  of the average daily  net assets of the  Class A shares may  be
used  to pay  for personal service  and the maintenance  of shareholder accounts
(service fee) and (ii) total distribution fees (including the service fee of .25
of 1%) may not exceed .30 of 1%. As so modified, the Class B Plan provides  that
(i) up to .25 of 1% of the average daily net assets of the Class B shares may be
paid  as a service fee and (ii) up to  .75 of 1% (not including the service fee)
may be used as reimbursement  for distribution-related expenses with respect  to
the  Class B shares (asset-based sales charge). The Class A Plan was approved by
the Class A shareholders on December 19, 1990. The Class B Plan was approved  by
shareholders  of the Fund  on January 11,  1990. On June  3, 1993, the Trustees,
including a majority of  the Rule 12b-1  Trustees, at a  meeting called for  the
purpose  of voting on each Plan, adopted a  plan of distribution for the Class C
shares of the Fund and approved further amendments to the plans of  distribution
for  the Fund's Class A and Class B shares changing them from reimbursement type
plans to compensation type plans. The Plans were last approved by the  Trustees,
including  a majority of the  Rule 12b-1 Trustees, on June  6, 1994. The Class A
Plan, as amended,  was approved by  Class A  and Class B  shareholders, and  the
Class B Plan, as amended, was approved by Class B shareholders on July 19, 1994.
The  Class C  Plan was  approved by the  sole shareholder  of Class  C shares on
August 1, 1994.

    CLASS A  PLAN. For  the fiscal  year ended  October 31,  1993 PMFD  received
payments  of $9,508 under the  Class A Plan. This  amount was primarily expended
for payment of account  servicing fees to financial  advisers and other  persons
who  sell Class A shares. For the fiscal  year ended October 31, 1993, PMFD also
received approximately $107,100 in initial sales charges.

    CLASS B  PLAN.  For the  fiscal  year  ended October  31,  1993,  Prudential
Securities  received $1,621,067 from the  Fund under the Class  B Plan and spent
approximately $2,036,000  in  distributing the  Fund's  Class B  shares.  It  is
estimated  that of this amount approximately  $20,800 (1%) was spent on printing
and mailing of prospectuses to other than current shareholders; $361,600 (17.8%)
on compensation to Prusec,  Prudential Securities, an affiliated  broker-dealer,
for  commissions  to  its  representatives  and  other  expenses,  including  an
allocation on account of overhead  and other branch office  distribution-related
expenses,  incurred by it for distribution of Fund shares and $1,653,600 (81.2%)
on the aggregate of  (i) payments of commissions  and account servicing fees  to
its  financial advisers ($763,000 or 37.5%) and (ii) an allocation on account of
overhead and other branch office

                                      B-14
<PAGE>
distribution-related expenses ($890,600 or 43.7%). The term "overhead and  other
branch  office  distribution-related expenses"  represents  (a) the  expenses of
operating branch offices of Prudential  Securities or Prusec in connection  with
the  sale  of Fund  shares,  including lease  costs,  the salaries  and employee
benefits of operations and sales support personnel, utility costs, communication
costs and the costs of  stationery and supplies, (b)  the costs of client  sales
seminars,  (c) expenses of mutual fund sales coordinators to promote the sale of
Fund shares and (d)  other incidental expenses relating  to branch promotion  of
Fund sales.

    Prudential  Securities  also receives  the  proceeds of  contingent deferred
sales charges paid  by holders  of Class B  shares upon  certain redemptions  of
Class  B  shares. See  "Shareholder Guide--How  to Sell  Your Shares--Contingent
Deferred Sales Charges" in the Prospectus. For the fiscal year ended October 31,
1993,  Prudential  Securities  received  approximately  $423,200  in  contingent
deferred sales charges.

    CLASS  C  PLAN. Prudential  Securities receives  the proceeds  of contingent
deferred sales charges  paid by investors  upon certain redemptions  of Class  C
shares.  See "Shareholder  Guide--How to  Sell Your  Shares--Contingent Deferred
Sales Charges"  in  the Prospectus.  Prior  to the  date  of this  Statement  of
Additional Information, no distribution expenses were incurred under the Class C
Plan.

    The Class A, Class B and Class C Plans continue in effect from year to year,
provided  that each such continuance is approved  at least annually by a vote of
the Trustees, including  a majority  vote of the  Rule 12b-1  Trustees, cast  in
person  at a meeting called  for the purpose of  voting on such continuance. The
Plans may each  be terminated at  any time, without  penalty, by the  vote of  a
majority  of the Rule 12b-1 Trustees or by the vote of the holders of a majority
of the outstanding  shares of the  applicable class  on not more  than 30  days'
written  notice to any other party to the Plans. The Plans may not be amended to
increase materially the amounts to be  spent for the services described  therein
without  approval by the shareholders  of the applicable class  (by both Class A
and Class B shareholders, voting separately, in the case of material  amendments
to the Class A Plan), and all material amendments are required to be approved by
the  Trustees  in  the  manner described  above.  Each  Plan  will automatically
terminate in the  event of its  assignment. The Fund  will not be  contractually
obligated  to pay expenses  incurred under any  Plan if it  is terminated or not
continued.

    Pursuant to each Plan, the Trustees will review at least quarterly a written
report of the distribution expenses incurred  on behalf of each class of  shares
of  the  Fund by  the Distributor.  The  report includes  an itemization  of the
distribution expenses and  the purposes  of such expenditures.  In addition,  as
long  as the Plans remain in effect,  the selection and nomination of Rule 12b-1
Trustees shall be committed to the Rule 12b-1 Trustees.

    Pursuant to each Distribution  Agreement, the Fund  has agreed to  indemnify
PMFD and Prudential Securities to the extent permitted by applicable law against
certain  liabilities  under  the  Securities  Act  of  1933,  as  amended.  Each
Distribution Agreement was last approved  by the Trustees, including a  majority
of the Rule 12b-1 Trustees, on June 6, 1994.

    NASD  MAXIMUM  SALES  CHARGE  RULE.  Pursuant  to  rules  of  the  NASD, the
Distributor is required to limit aggregate initial sales charges, deferred sales
charges and asset-based  sales charges  to 6.25% of  total gross  sales of  each
class of shares. Interest charges on unreimbursed distribution expenses equal to
the  prime rate plus one percent per annum may be added to the 6.25% limitation.
Sales from the reinvestment of dividends  and distributions are not required  to
be  included in the calculation of  the 6.25% limitation. The annual asset-based
sales charge on shares of the Fund may not exceed .75 of 1% per class. The 6.25%
limitation applies  to the  Fund rather  than  on a  per shareholder  basis.  If
aggregate  sales charges were to exceed 6.25% of total gross sales of any class,
all sales charges on shares of that class would be suspended.

                      PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE

    The Manager is responsible for decisions to buy and sell securities, futures
contracts and options on such securities and futures contracts for the Fund, the
selection of brokers,  dealers and  futures commission merchants  to effect  the
transactions   and   the   negotiation  of   brokerage   commissions,   if  any.
Broker-dealers may receive brokerage commissions on Fund portfolio transactions,
including options, futures, and options on futures transactions and the purchase
and sale of underlying  securities upon the exercise  of options. Orders may  be
directed  to any broker or futures  commission merchant including, to the extent
and in the  manner permitted by  applicable law, Prudential  Securities and  its
affiliates. The term "Manager" as used in this section includes the Subadviser.

    In the U.S. Government securities market, securities are generally traded on
a  "net" basis with dealers acting as principal for their own accounts without a
stated commission, although the price of the security usually includes a  profit
to the dealer. In

                                      B-15
<PAGE>
underwritten offerings, securities are purchased at a fixed price which includes
an  amount  of compensation  to the  underwriter, generally  referred to  as the
underwriter's  concession  or  discount.  On  occasion,  certain  money   market
instruments  and agency securities may be purchased directly from the issuer, in
which case no commissions  or discounts are  paid. The Fund  will not deal  with
Prudential  Securities or any affiliates in  any transaction in which Prudential
Securities or any affiliates acts as principal.  Thus, it will not deal in  U.S.
Government  securities with Prudential Securities acting as market maker, and it
will not  execute a  negotiated trade  with Prudential  Securities if  execution
involves  Prudential Securities' acting as principal with respect to any part of
the Fund's order.

    Portfolio securities may not be  purchased from any underwriting or  selling
syndicate  of  which  Prudential  Securities  (or  any  affiliate),  during  the
existence of  the syndicate,  is  a principal  underwriter  (as defined  in  the
Investment  Company  Act), except  in  accordance with  rules  of the  SEC. This
limitation, in the opinion of the Fund, will not significantly affect the Fund's
ability to pursue its present investment  objective. However, in the future,  in
other  circumstances,  the  Fund  may  be  at  a  disadvantage  because  of this
limitation in comparison to other funds with similar objectives but not  subject
to such limitations.

    In  placing  orders for  portfolio securities  of the  Fund, the  Manager is
required to give primary consideration to obtaining the most favorable price and
efficient execution.  This means  that the  Manager will  seek to  execute  each
transaction  at a price and commission, if any, which provide the most favorable
total cost or  proceeds reasonably  attainable in the  circumstances. While  the
Manager  generally seeks reasonably competitive spreads or commissions, the Fund
will not necessarily be paying the lowest spread or commission available. Within
the framework  of  this policy,  the  Manager  will consider  the  research  and
investment services provided by brokers, dealers or futures commission merchants
who  effect or are parties to portfolio transactions of the Fund, the Manager or
its clients. Such  research and  investment services are  those which  brokerage
houses  customarily provide  to institutional investors  and include statistical
and economic data and research  reports on particular companies and  industries.
Such  services are used by the Manager  in connection with all of its investment
activities, and some of such services obtained in connection with the  execution
of  transactions for the Fund may be used in managing other investment accounts.
Conversely, brokers,  dealers or  futures commission  merchants furnishing  such
services  may  be  selected for  the  execution  of transactions  of  such other
accounts, whose aggregate assets are far larger than the Fund, and the  services
furnished  by such brokers, dealers or  futures commission merchants may be used
by the Manager in providing investment management for the Fund. Commission rates
are established  pursuant to  negotiations with  the broker,  dealer or  futures
commission  merchant based  on the  quality and  quantity of  execution services
provided by the broker or futures commission merchant in the light of  generally
prevailing  rates.  The  Manager  is authorized  to  pay  higher  commissions on
brokerage transactions for the Fund  to brokers, dealers and futures  commission
merchants  other  than Prudential  Securities in  order  to secure  research and
investment services described above,  subject to review  by the Fund's  Trustees
from  time  to time  as to  the extent  and continuation  of this  practice. The
allocation of  orders among  brokers and  futures commission  merchants and  the
commission rates paid are reviewed periodically by the Fund's Trustees.

    Subject  to the  above considerations,  Prudential Securities  may act  as a
broker or futures  commission merchant  for the  Fund. In  order for  Prudential
Securities (or any affiliate) to effect any portfolio transactions for the Fund,
the  commissions, fees or  other remuneration received  by Prudential Securities
(or any affiliate) must be reasonable and fair compared to the commissions, fees
or other remuneration paid to other such brokers or futures commission merchants
in connection  with  comparable  transactions involving  similar  securities  or
futures  contracts being  purchased or  sold on  an exchange  or board  of trade
during a  comparable  period  of  time. This  standard  would  allow  Prudential
Securities  (or any  affiliate) to receive  no more than  the remuneration which
would be expected to be received by an unaffiliated broker or futures commission
merchant in a commensurate arms-length transaction. Furthermore, the Trustees of
the Fund,  including a  majority  of the  noninterested Trustees,  have  adopted
procedures  which are reasonably designed to  provide that any commissions, fees
or other  remuneration paid  to  Prudential Securities  (or any  affiliate)  are
consistent  with the foregoing standard. In  accordance with Section 11(a) under
the Securities  Exchange  Act of  1934,  Prudential Securities  may  not  retain
compensation  for effecting transactions  on a national  securities exchange for
the Fund  unless  the  Fund  has expressly  authorized  the  retention  of  such
compensation. Prudential Securities must furnish to the Fund at least annually a
statement  setting  forth  the  total amount  of  all  compensation  retained by
Prudential Securities  from  transactions  effected  for  the  Fund  during  the
applicable  period. Brokerage  transactions with  Prudential Securities  (or any
affiliate) are also subject to such  fiduciary standards as may be imposed  upon
Prudential Securities (or such affiliate) by applicable law.

    During the fiscal years ended October 31, 1993, 1992 and 1991, the Fund paid
no brokerage commissions to Prudential Securities.

                                      B-16
<PAGE>
                     PURCHASE AND REDEMPTION OF FUND SHARES

    Shares  of the Fund may be purchased at a price equal to the next determined
net asset value per  share, plus a  sales charge which, at  the election of  the
investor,  may be imposed either (i) at the time of purchase (Class A shares) or
(ii) on  a  deferred  basis  (Class  B or  Class  C  shares).  See  "Shareholder
Guide--Alternative Purchase Plan" in the Prospectus.

    Each  class  of  shares represents  an  interest  in the  same  portfolio of
investments of the  Fund and has  the same  rights, except that  (i) each  class
bears  the separate  expenses of its  Rule 12b-1 distribution  and service plan,
(ii) each class  has exclusive voting  rights with respect  to its plan  (except
that  the Fund  has agreed  with the SEC  in connection  with the  offering of a
conversion feature on  Class B shares  to submit  any amendment of  the Class  A
distribution  and service  plan to  both Class A  and Class  B shareholders) and
(iii) only Class  B shares have  a conversion feature.  See "Distributor."  Each
class  also  has  separate  exchange  privileges.  See  "Shareholder  Investment
Account--Exchange Privilege."

SPECIMEN PRICE MAKE-UP

    Under the  current  distribution  arrangements  between  the  Fund  and  the
Distributor,  Class A shares are sold at a  maximum sales charge of 4% and Class
B* and Class C* shares are sold at  net asset value. Using the Fund's net  asset
value at October 31, 1993, the maximum offering price of the Fund's shares is as
follows:

<TABLE>
<S>                                                                        <C>
CLASS A
  Net asset value and redemption price per Class A share.................  $   10.59
  Maximum sales charge (4% of offering price)............................        .44
                                                                           ---------
  Offering price to public...............................................  $   11.03
                                                                           ---------
                                                                           ---------
CLASS B
  Net asset value, offering price and redemption price per Class B
    share*...............................................................  $   10.60
                                                                           ---------
                                                                           ---------
CLASS C
  Net asset value, offering price and redemption price per Class C
    share*...............................................................  $   10.60
                                                                           ---------
                                                                           ---------
<FN>

        --------------------
        *  Class B and Class C shares are subject to a contingent deferred sales
       charge on certain redemptions. See  "Shareholder Guide--How to Sell  Your
       Shares--Contingent  Deferred Sales  Charges" in  the Prospectus.  Class C
       shares did not exist on October 31, 1993.
</TABLE>

REDUCED INITIAL SALES CHARGES--CLASS A SHARES

    COMBINED PURCHASE  AND  CUMULATIVE PURCHASE  PRIVILEGE.  If an  investor  or
eligible  group  of  related investors  purchases  Class  A shares  of  the Fund
concurrently with Class A shares of other Prudential Mutual Funds, the purchases
may be combined  to take advantage  of the reduced  sales charges applicable  to
larger   purchases.   See   the   table   of   breakpoints   under  "Shareholder
Guide--Alternative Purchase Plan" in the Prospectus.

    An eligible group of related Fund investors includes any combination of  the
following:

    (a) an individual;

    (b) the individual's spouse, their children and their parents;

    (c) the individual's and spouse's Individual Retirement Account (IRA);

    (d) any company controlled by the individual (a person, entity or group that
holds  25% or  more of the  outstanding voting  securities of a  company will be
deemed to control the company, and a partnership will be deemed to be controlled
by each of its general partners);

    (e) a trust created  by the individual, the  beneficiaries of which are  the
individual, his or her spouse, parents or children;

    (f)   a Uniform Gifts to Minors  Act/Uniform Transfers to Minors Act account
created by the individual or the individual's spouse; and

    (g) one  or  more employee  benefit  plans of  a  company controlled  by  an
individual.

                                      B-17
<PAGE>
    In  addition, an  eligible group of  related Fund investors  may include the
following: an employer (or group of related employers) and one or more qualified
retirement plans  of  such  employer  or  employers  (an  employer  controlling,
controlled by or under common control with another employer is deemed related to
that employer).

    The  Distributor must be notified at the  time of purchase that the investor
is entitled to a reduced sales charge. The reduced sales charge will be  granted
subject  to confirmation of  the investor's holdings.  The Combined Purchase and
Cumulative Purchase Privilege does not  apply to individual participants in  any
retirement or group plans.

    RIGHTS  OF ACCUMULATION.  Reduced sales  charges are  also available through
Rights of Accumulation, under which an investor or an eligible group of  related
investors,  as described above under  "Combined Purchase and Cumulative Purchase
Privilege," may aggregate the value of their existing holdings of the shares  of
the  Fund and  shares of other  Prudential Mutual Funds  (excluding money market
funds other than those acquired pursuant to the exchange privilege) to determine
the reduced sales charge.  However, the value of  shares held directly with  the
Transfer  Agent  and through  Prudential Securities  will  not be  aggregated to
determine the reduced sales charge. All shares must be held either directly with
the Transfer  Agent or  through  Prudential Securities.  The value  of  existing
holdings  for purposes  of determining  the reduced  sales charge  is calculated
using the maximum offering price (net asset value plus maximum sales charge)  as
of  the  previous business  day. See  "How the  Fund Values  its Shares"  in the
Prospectus. The Distributor must  be notified at the  time of purchase that  the
investor  is entitled to a reduced sales  charge. The reduced sales charges will
be granted  subject  to  confirmation  of the  investor's  holdings.  Rights  of
accumulation  are not available to individual  participants in any retirement or
group plans.

    LETTER OF INTENT.  Reduced sales charges  are available to  investors or  an
eligible  group of related investors  who enter into a  written Letter of Intent
providing for the  purchase, within a  thirteen-month period, of  shares of  the
Fund  and shares of  other Prudential Mutual  Funds. All shares  of the Fund and
shares of other Prudential Mutual Funds (excluding money market funds other than
those acquired  pursuant  to  the  exchange  privilege)  which  were  previously
purchased  and are still  owned are also included  in determining the applicable
reduction. However, the value  of shares held directly  with the Transfer  Agent
and  through  Prudential  Securities will  not  be aggregated  to  determine the
reduced sales charge. All shares must be held either directly with the  Transfer
Agent  or through Prudential Securities. Letters  of Intent are not available to
individual participants in any retirement or group plans.

    A Letter of Intent permits a purchaser to establish a total investment  goal
to  be achieved by any number of  investments over a thirteen-month period. Each
investment made  during  the  period  will  receive  the  reduced  sales  charge
applicable  to  the amount  represented  by the  goal, as  if  it were  a single
investment. Escrowed Class  A shares  totaling 5% of  the dollar  amount of  the
Letter  of  Intent  will be  held  by the  Transfer  Agent  in the  name  of the
purchaser. The effective date of a Letter  of Intent may be back-dated up to  90
days,  in order that any  investments made during this  90-day period, valued at
the purchaser's cost, can be applied to the fulfillment of the Letter of  Intent
goal.

    The  Letter of Intent  does not obligate  the investor to  purchase, nor the
Fund to sell, the indicated  amount. In the event the  Letter of Intent goal  is
not  achieved within the thirteen-month period, the purchaser is required to pay
the difference between the  sales charge otherwise  applicable to the  purchases
made  during this period  and sales charges  actually paid. Such  payment may be
made directly to the Distributor or, if not paid, the Distributor will liquidate
sufficient escrowed shares to obtain such difference. If the goal is exceeded in
an amount which qualifies for a lower  sales charge, a price adjustment is  made
by  refunding to the purchaser  the amount of excess  sales charge, if any, paid
during the thirteen-month period. Investors electing to purchase Class A  shares
of  the Fund pursuant to a Letter of Intent should carefully read such Letter of
Intent.

                                      B-18
<PAGE>
WAIVER OF THE CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE--CLASS B SHARES.

    The Contingent Deferred Sales Charge is waived under circumstances described
in the Prospectus. See  "Shareholder Guide--How to  Sell Your Shares--Waiver  of
Contingent  Deferred  Sales  Charges--Class  B  Shares"  in  the  Prospectus. In
connection with these waivers, the Transfer Agent will require you to submit the
supporting documentation set forth below.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
CATEGORY OF WAIVER                             REQUIRED DOCUMENTATION

<S>                                            <C>
Death                                          A copy of the shareholder's  death certificate or, in the  case
                                               of  a trust, a copy of  the grantor's death certificate, plus a
                                               copy of the trust agreement identifying the grantor.

Disability--An individual will be  considered  A  copy of the Social Security Administration award letter or a
disabled if he or she is unable to engage  in  letter  from a physician on  the physician's letterhead stating
any substantial gainful activity by reason of  that the shareholder (or, in the case of a trust, the  grantor)
any medically determinable physical or mental  is permanently disabled. The letter must also indicate the date
impairment which can be expected to result in  of disability.
death   or  to   be  of   long-continued  and
indefinite duration.

Distribution from an IRA or 403(b) Custodial   A copy  of  the  distribution  form  from  the  custodial  firm
Account                                        indicating  (i) the date  of birth of  the shareholder and (ii)
                                               that the shareholder is over age 59 1/2 and is taking a  normal
                                               distribution--signed by the shareholder.

Distribution from Retirement Plan              A  letter signed  by the  plan administrator/trustee indicating
                                               the reason for the distribution.

Excess Contributions                           A letter  from  the  shareholder  (for  an  IRA)  or  the  plan
                                               administrator/  trustee  on company  letterhead  indicating the
                                               amount of the excess and whether or not taxes have been paid.

The Transfer Agent reserves the right to request such additional documents as it may deem appropriate.
</TABLE>

QUANTITY DISCOUNT--CLASS B SHARES PURCHASED PRIOR TO AUGUST 1, 1994

    The CDSC is reduced on redemptions of  Class B shares of the Fund  purchased
prior  to August  1, 1994 if  immediately after  a purchase of  such shares, the
aggregate cost of  all Class  B shares  of the  Fund owned  by you  in a  single
account  exceeded $500,000.  For example, if  you purchased $100,000  of Class B
shares of the  Fund and the  following year purchase  an additional $450,000  of
Class  B shares with the  result that the aggregate cost  of your Class B shares
following the  second purchase  was  $550,000, the  quantity discount  would  be
available  for the second purchase of $450,000 but not for the first purchase of
$100,000. The quantity discount will be imposed at the following rates depending
on whether the aggregate value exceeded $500,000 or $1 million:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE
                                AS A PERCENTAGE OF DOLLARS INVESTED
                                       OR REDEMPTION PROCEEDS
                                ------------------------------------
     YEAR SINCE PURCHASE          $500,001 TO $1         OVER $1
         PAYMENT MADE                 MILLION            MILLION
- ------------------------------  -------------------   --------------
<S>                             <C>                   <C>
First.........................          3.0%               2.0%
Second........................          2.0%               1.0%
Third.........................          1.0%               0  %
Fourth and thereafter.........          0  %               0  %
</TABLE>

    You must  notify  the  Fund's  Transfer Agent  either  directly  or  through
Prudential  Securities  or  Prusec, at  the  time  of redemption,  that  you are
entitled to  the reduced  CDSC. The  reduced  CDSC will  be granted  subject  to
confirmation of your holdings.

                                      B-19
<PAGE>
                         SHAREHOLDER INVESTMENT ACCOUNT

    Upon  the initial purchase of Fund  shares, a Shareholder Investment Account
is established for  each investor under  which a  record of the  shares held  is
maintained  by the Transfer Agent. If a share certificate is desired, it must be
requested in writing for each transaction. Certificates are issued only for full
shares and may be redeposited in the Account at any time. There is no charge  to
the  investor for  issuance of  a certificate. The  Fund makes  available to the
shareholders the following privileges and plans.

    AUTOMATIC  REINVESTMENT   OF  DIVIDENDS   AND/OR  DISTRIBUTIONS.   For   the
convenience  of  investors, all  dividends  and distributions  are automatically
reinvested in full  and fractional shares  of the  Fund at net  asset value  per
share.  An investor may direct the Transfer  Agent in writing not less than five
full business days prior to the record date to have subsequent dividends  and/or
distributions  sent  in cash  rather than  reinvested. In  the case  of recently
purchased shares for which registration  instructions have not been received  on
the  record  date,  cash  payment  will be  made  directly  to  the  dealer. Any
shareholder who receives a cash payment representing a dividend or  distribution
may  reinvest such distribution at net asset value by returning the check or the
proceeds to  the Transfer  Agent within  30 days  after the  payment date.  Such
investment  will be made at the net  asset value per share next determined after
receipt of the check or proceeds by the Transfer Agent.

EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE

    The Fund makes  available to  its shareholders the  privilege of  exchanging
their  shares of the Fund  for shares of certain  other Prudential Mutual Funds,
including one or more specified money market funds, subject in each case to  the
minimum  investment requirements of such funds.  Shares of such other Prudential
Mutual Funds may also  be exchanged for  shares of the  Fund. All exchanges  are
made  on the basis of relative net  asset value next determined after receipt of
an order  in proper  form.  An exchange  will be  treated  as a  redemption  and
purchase  for tax purposes. Shares  may be exchanged for  shares of another fund
only if shares of such fund may legally be sold under applicable state laws. For
retirement and group plans having a limited menu of Prudential Mutual Funds, the
Exchange Privilege is available for those  funds eligible for investment in  the
particular program.

    It  is contemplated  that the  Exchange Privilege  may be  applicable to new
mutual funds whose shares may be distributed by the Distributor.

    CLASS A. Shareholders  of the  Fund may exchange  their Class  A shares  for
Class  A shares of  certain other Prudential Mutual  Funds, shares of Prudential
Structured  Maturity   Fund   and   Prudential   Government   Securities   Trust
(Intermediate Term Series) and shares of the money market funds specified below.
No  fee or sales load  will be imposed upon  the exchange. Shareholders of money
market funds who acquired such  shares upon exchange of  Class A shares may  use
the  Exchange Privilege only to acquire Class  A shares of the Prudential Mutual
Funds participating in the Exchange Privilege.

    The following  money  market  funds  participate in  the  Class  A  Exchange
Privilege:

       Prudential California Municipal Fund
         (California Money Market Series)
       Prudential Government Securities Trust
         (Money Market Series)
         (U.S. Treasury Money Market Series)
       Prudential Municipal Series Fund
         (Connecticut Money Market Series)
         (Massachusetts Money Market Series)
         (New Jersey Money Market Series)
         (New York Money Market Series)
       Prudential MoneyMart Assets
       Prudential Tax-Free Money Fund

    CLASS B AND CLASS C. Shareholders of the Fund may exchange their Class B and
Class  C shares for Class  B and Class C  shares, respectively, of certain other
Prudential Mutual Funds and  shares of Prudential Special  Money Market Fund,  a
money market fund. No CDSC will be payable upon such exchange, but a CDSC may be
payable  upon the redemption of Class B and  Class C shares acquired as a result
of the exchange. The applicable sales charge will be that imposed by the fund in
which shares were initially purchased and the purchase date will be deemed to be
the date of the initial purchase, rather than the date of the exchange.

                                      B-20
<PAGE>
    Class B and Class C shares of the  Fund may also be exchanged for shares  of
an  eligible money  market fund without  imposition of  any CDSC at  the time of
exchange. Upon subsequent redemption  from such money market  fund or after  re-
exchange  into the  Fund, such  shares will  be subject  to the  CDSC calculated
without regard to the time  such shares were held in  the money market fund.  In
order  to minimize  the period of  time in which  shares are subject  to a CDSC,
shares exchanged out of the money market fund will be exchanged on the basis  of
their  remaining  holding periods,  with the  longest remaining  holding periods
being transferred first. In measuring the time period shares are held in a money
market fund and "tolled"  for purposes of calculating  the CDSC holding  period,
exchanges  are deemed to have been  made on the last day  of the month. Thus, if
shares are exchanged into  the Fund from  a money market  fund during the  month
(and  are held in the  Fund at the end  of the month), the  entire month will be
included in the CDSC holding period. Conversely, if shares are exchanged into  a
money  market fund prior to the last day of the month (and are held in the money
market fund on the  last day of  the month), the entire  month will be  excluded
from the CDSC holding period. For purposes of calculating the seven year holding
period  applicable to  the Class  B conversion  feature, the  time period during
which Class B shares were held in a money market fund will be excluded.

    At any time after acquiring shares of other funds participating in the Class
B or Class C exchange privilege,  a shareholder may again exchange those  shares
(and  any reinvested dividends and distributions) for  Class B or Class C shares
of the Fund, respectively, without subjecting such shares to any CDSC. Shares of
any fund participating in the  Class B or Class  C Exchange Privilege that  were
acquired through reinvestment of dividends or distributions may be exchanged for
Class B or Class C shares of other funds without being subject to any CDSC.

    Additional details about the Exchange Privilege and prospectuses for each of
the  Prudential  Mutual  Funds are  available  from the  Fund's  Transfer Agent,
Prudential Securities  or  Prusec.  The  Exchange  Privilege  may  be  modified,
terminated or suspended on sixty days' notice, and any fund, including the Fund,
or the Distributor, has the right to reject any exchange application relating to
such fund's shares.

    DOLLAR  COST AVERAGING.  Dollar cost averaging  is a  method of accumulating
shares by investing a  fixed amount of  dollars in shares  at set intervals.  An
investor  buys more shares when the price is low and fewer shares when the price
is high. The  average cost per  share is lower  than it would  be if a  constant
number of shares were bought at set intervals.

    Dollar  cost averaging may be used, for  example, to plan for retirement, to
save for a major expenditure,  such as the purchase of  a home, or to finance  a
college  education. The cost of a year's  education at a four-year college today
averages around  $14,000 at  a private  college and  around $4,800  at a  public
university.  Assuming these costs increase  at a rate of 7%  a year, as has been
projected, for the freshman class of 2007,  the cost of four years at a  private
college could reach $163,000 and over $97,000 at a public university.(1)

    The  following chart shows how must you would need in monthly investments to
achieve specified lump sums to finance your investment goals.(2)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PERIOD OF
MONTHLY INVESTMENTS:         $100,000     $150,000     $200,000     $250,000
- --------------------------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                         <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
25 Years..................   $     110    $     165    $     220    $     275
20 Years..................         176          264          352          440
15 Years..................         296          444          592          740
10 Years..................         555          833        1,110        1,388
5 Years...................       1,371        2,057        2,742        3,428

See "Automatic Savings Accumulation Plan."
<FN>
- ------------
(1) Source information concerning the costs of education at public universities
is available from The College Board Annual Survey of Colleges, 1992. Information
about the costs of private colleges is from the Digest of Education Statistics,
1992; The National Center for Educational Statistics; and the U.S. Department of
Education. Average costs for private institutions include tuition, fees, room
and board.
(2) The  chart assumes  an effective  rate  of return  of 8%  (assuming  monthly
compounding). This example is for illustrative purposes only and is not intended
to  reflect  the  performance  of  an investment  in  shares  of  the  Fund. The
investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate so that an
investor's shares when redeemed  may be worth more  or less than their  original
cost.
</TABLE>

                                      B-21
<PAGE>
AUTOMATIC SAVINGS ACCUMULATION PLAN (ASAP)

    Under  ASAP, an  investor may arrange  to have a  fixed amount automatically
invested in shares of the Fund monthly by authorizing his or her bank account or
Prudential Securities Account  (including a  Command Account) to  be debited  to
invest  specified dollar amounts in shares of the Fund. The investor's bank must
be a member of the Automatic  Clearing House System. Stock certificates are  not
issued to ASAP participants.

    Further  information  about  this program  and  an application  form  can be
obtained from the Transfer Agent, Prudential Securities or Prusec.

SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN

    A systematic withdrawal plan is available to shareholders through Prudential
Securities or the Transfer Agent. Such  withdrawal plan provides for monthly  or
quarterly checks in any amount, except as provided below, up to the value of the
shares  in the shareholder's account.  Withdrawals of Class B  or Class C shares
may  be  subject  to  a  CDSC.  See  "Shareholder  Guide--  How  to  Sell   Your
Shares--Contingent Deferred Sales Charges" in the Prospectus.

    In  the case of shares held through the Transfer Agent (i) a $10,000 minimum
account value applies, (ii) withdrawals may not be for less than $100 and  (iii)
the   shareholder  must  elect  to   have  all  dividends  and/or  distributions
automatically reinvested in additional full  and fractional shares at net  asset
value  on shares  held under  this plan.  See "Shareholder  Investment Account--
Automatic Reinvestment of Dividends and/or Distributions."

    Prudential  Securities  and  the  Transfer  Agent  act  as  agents  for  the
shareholder  in redeeming sufficient  full and fractional  shares to provide the
amount of the periodic withdrawal payment. The systematic withdrawal plan may be
terminated at any time, and the Distributor reserves the right to initiate a fee
of up to $5 per withdrawal, upon 30 days' written notice to the shareholder.

    Withdrawal payments should not be considered as dividends, yield or  income.
If   periodic   withdrawals   continuously  exceed   reinvested   dividends  and
distributions, the  shareholder's original  investment will  be  correspondingly
reduced and ultimately exhausted.

    Furthermore,  each withdrawal  constitutes a  redemption of  shares, and any
gain or  loss realized  must  generally be  recognized  for federal  income  tax
purposes.   In  addition,  withdrawals  made   concurrently  with  purchases  of
additional shares are inadvisable because of the sales charge applicable to  (i)
the  purchase of Class A shares  and (ii) the withdrawal of  Class B and Class C
shares. Each shareholder should consult his  or her own tax adviser with  regard
to  the tax consequences of the systematic withdrawal plan, particularly if used
in connection with a retirement plan.

TAX-DEFERRED RETIREMENT PLANS

    Various qualified retirement plans,  including a 401(k) plan,  self-directed
individual  retirement  accounts  and  "tax  sheltered  accounts"  under Section
403(b)(7) of the Internal  Revenue Code are  available through the  Distributor.
These  plans  are  for  use  by  both  self-employed  individuals  and corporate
employers. These plans permit either self-direction of accounts by participants,
or a  pooled account  arrangement. Information  regarding the  establishment  of
these  plans, the administration, custodial fees and other details are available
from Prudential Securities or the Transfer Agent.

    Investors who are  considering the adoption  of such a  plan should  consult
with  their own legal counsel  or tax adviser with  respect to the establishment
and maintenance of any such plan.

TAX-DEFERRED RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS

    INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT  ACCOUNTS.  An  individual  retirement  account  (IRA)
permits the deferral of federal income tax on income earned in the account until
the  earnings are withdrawn. The following  chart represents a comparison of the
earnings in a

                                      B-22
<PAGE>
personal savings  account  with  those  in an  IRA,  assuming  a  $2,000  annual
contribution,  an 8% rate of  return and a 39.6%  federal income tax bracket and
shows how much more retirement income can accumulate within an IRA as opposed to
a taxable individual savings account.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          TAX-DEFERRED COMPOUNDING(1)
                  CONTRIBUTIONS           PERSONAL
                  MADE OVER:              SAVINGS       IRA
                  --------------------    --------    --------
                  <S>                     <C>         <C>
                  10 years............    $ 26,165    $ 31,291
                  15 years............      44,675      58,649
                  20 years............      68,109      98,846
                  25 years............      97,780     157,909
                  30 years............     135,346     244,692
<FN>
- ------------
(1) The  chart is  for illustrative  purposes only  and does  not represent  the
performance  of the  Fund or  any specific  investment. It  shows taxable versus
tax-deferred compounding for the periods and on the terms indicated. Earnings in
the IRA account will be subject to tax when withdrawn from the account.
</TABLE>

                                NET ASSET VALUE

    The net  asset  value per  share  is the  net  worth of  the  Fund  (assets,
including  securities  at value,  minus liabilities)  divided  by the  number of
shares outstanding. Net asset value is calculated separately for each class. The
Fund computes its net asset  value at 4:15 p.m., New  York time on each day  the
New  York Stock Exchange is  open for trading except days  on which no orders to
purchase, sell or  redeem Fund shares  have been  received or on  days on  which
changes in the value of the Fund's portfolio investments do not affect net asset
value.

    Under   the  Investment  Company  Act,  the  Trustees  are  responsible  for
determining in  good  faith  the  fair  value of  securities  of  the  Fund.  In
accordance  with  procedures adopted  by the  Trustees, the  value of  each U.S.
Government security for  which quotations  are available  will be  based on  the
valuation  provided by an independent pricing service. Pricing services consider
such factors as security prices, yields, maturities, call features, ratings  and
developments   relating  to  specific  securities   in  arriving  at  securities
valuations. Exchange-traded options on U.S. Government securities are valued  at
their  last sale  price as  of the  close of  options trading  on the applicable
exchanges. If there is  no sale on  the applicable options  exchange on a  given
day,  options are valued at the average of the quoted bid and asked prices as of
the close of  the applicable exchange.  Futures contracts are  marked to  market
daily,  and options thereon are valued at their last sale price, as of the close
of the applicable commodities exchanges.

    Securities or  other assets  for  which market  quotations are  not  readily
available  (including OTC Options) are valued  at their fair value as determined
in good faith  by the  Investment Adviser  under procedures  established by  the
Fund's  Trustees. Short-term debt  securities which mature in  more than 60 days
are valued at current market quotations. Short-term debt securities which mature
in 60  days or  less are  valued at  amortized cost  if their  original term  to
maturity  from the date of purchase was 60  days or less, or by amortizing their
value on the 61st day prior to maturity, if their term to maturity from the date
of purchase exceeded 60 days, unless the Trustees determine that such  valuation
does not represent fair value.

    In  the event that  the New York  Stock Exchange or  the national securities
exchanges on which  stock options are  traded adopt different  trading hours  on
either  a permanent or temporary basis, the Trustees of the Fund will reconsider
the time at which net asset value is computed. In addition, the Fund may compute
its net asset value as of any time permitted pursuant to any exemption, order or
statement of the Securities and Exchange  Commission or its staff. The New  York
Stock  Exchange is closed on the following holidays: New Year's Day, Presidents'
Day, Good Friday, Memorial  Day, Independence Day,  Labor Day, Thanksgiving  Day
and Christmas Day.

                                      B-23
<PAGE>
                            PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

    YIELD. The Fund may from time to time advertise its yield as calculated over
a 30-day period. Yield is determined separately for Class A, Class B and Class C
shares.  The yield will be computed by dividing the Fund's net investment income
per share earned  during this 30-day  period by the  maximum offering price  per
share  on the  last day  of this  period. Yield  is calculated  according to the
following formula:

                            a - b
               YIELD = 2[( -------   +1)to the power of 6 - 1]
                             cd

    Where:  a =  dividends and interest earned during the period.
            b =  expenses accrued for the period (net of reimbursements).
            c =  the average daily number of shares outstanding during the
                 period that were entitled to receive
                 dividends.
            d =  the maximum offering price per share on the last day of the
                 period.

    The yield for the 30-day period ended April 30, 1994 for the Fund's Class  A
and  Class B shares  was 5.93% and  5.51%, respectively. During  this period, no
Class C shares were outstanding.

    Yield fluctuates and an annualized  yield quotation is not a  representation
by  the Fund as  to what an investment  in the Fund will  actually yield for any
given period.  Yields for  the  Fund will  vary based  on  a number  of  factors
including  changes in net asset value,  market conditions, the level of interest
rates and the level of Fund income and expenses.

    AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN. The Fund may also advertise its average  annual
total  return. Average annual total return is determined separately for Class A,
Class B and Class  C shares. See  "How the Fund  Calculates Performance" in  the
Prospectus.

    Average annual total return is computed according to the following formula:

                         P(1+T)to the power of n = ERV

Where: P = a hypothetical initial payment of $1000.
       T = average annual total return.
       n = number of years.
       ERV = ending redeemable value at the end of the 1, 5 or 10 year periods
             (or fractional portion thereof) of a hypothetical $1,000 payment
             made at the beginning of the 1, 5 or 10 year periods.

    Average  annual total  return takes into  account any  applicable initial or
contingent deferred sales charges but does not take into account any federal  or
state income taxes that may be payable upon redemption.

    The  average annual total return for Class  A shares for the one year period
ended April 30, 1994 and for the  period from January 22, 1990 (commencement  of
operations)  to April 30,  1994 was -4.06% and  6.80%, respectively. The average
annual total return for Class B shares  for the one and five year periods  ended
on  April 30,  1994 and for  the period  from November 7,  1986 (commencement of
operations) to April 30, 1994 was -5.25%, 7.92% and 6.52%, respectively.  During
these  periods, no Class C  shares were outstanding. Without  the fee waiver and
expense subsidy the  average annual  total return with  respect to  the Class  B
shares  for the five year  period ended April 30, 1994  and for the period since
inception would have been 7.92% and 6.37%, respectively.

    AGGREGATE TOTAL  RETURN. The  Fund may  also advertise  its aggregate  total
return. Aggregate total return is determined separately for Class A, Class B and
Class C shares. See "How the Fund Calculates Performance" in the Prospectus.

    Aggregate  total return represents the cumulative  change in the value of an
investment in the Fund and is computed according to the following formula:

                                    ERV - P
                                    -------
                                       P

    Where: P = a hypothetical initial payment of $1000.
           ERV = ending redeemable value at the end of the 1, 5 or 10 year
                 periods (or fractional portion thereof) of a hypothetical $1000
                 payment made at the beginning of the 1, 5 or 10 year periods.

                                      B-24
<PAGE>
    Aggregate total  return does  not take  into account  any federal  or  state
income  taxes that may be  payable upon redemption or  any applicable initial or
contingent deferred sales charges.

    The aggregate total return for Class A shares for the one year period  ended
on  April 30,  1994 and for  the period  from January 22,  1990 (commencement of
operations) to April 30, 1994 was 0.46% and 38.69%, respectively. The  aggregate
total return for Class B shares for the one and five year periods ended on April
30,  1994 and for  the period November  7, 1986 (commencement  of operations) to
April 30,  1994  was  -0.25%,  47.43% and  60.38%,  respectively.  During  these
periods, no Class C shares were outstanding.

PERFORMANCE CHART

    From  time to  time, the  performance of  the Fund  may be  measured against
various indices. Set forth  below is a chart  which compares the performance  of
different types of investments over the long-term and the rate of inflation.(1)

                                   [GRAPHIC]

(1)  Source:  Ibbotson  Associates, "Stocks,  Bonds,  Bills  and Inflation--1993
Yearbook",  (annually  updates  the  work  of  Roger  G.  Ibbotson  and  Rex  A.
Sinquefield).  Common stock returns are based on the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock
Index, a market-weighted, unmanaged index of  500 common stocks in a variety  of
industry  sectors.  It  is  a  commonly  used  indicator  of  broad  stock price
movements. This chart is for illustrative purposes only, and is not intended  to
represent the performance of any particular investment or fund.

                                     TAXES

    GENERAL.  The  Fund  has qualified  and  intends  to remain  qualified  as a
regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code for
each taxable year. Accordingly, the Fund must, among other things, (a) derive at
least 90% of its gross income from  dividends, interest and gains from the  sale
or  other  disposition  of  securities or  foreign  currencies  or  other income
including income  from  options and  futures  on such  securities  derived  with
respect  to its  business of investing  in such securities,  options, futures or
currencies; (b) derive less than 30% of its gross income from the sale or  other
disposition of securities and certain options, futures and forward contracts and
foreign  currencies held less than three  months; and (c) diversify its holdings
so that, at the end of each fiscal  quarter, (i) 50% of the market value of  the
Fund's  assets  is represented  by cash,  U.S.  Government securities  and other
securities limited, in respect of any one issuer, to an amount not greater  than
5%  of  the  Fund's assets  and  not more  than  10% of  the  outstanding voting
securities  of   any   such   issuer,   and  (ii)   not   more   than   25%   of

                                      B-25
<PAGE>
the  value of its assets is invested in  the securities of any one issuer (other
than the U.S. Government). There are also requirements that may limit the Fund's
ability to engage in transactions involving options on securities, interest rate
futures and options thereon.

    The Fund has  received a  private letter  ruling from  the Internal  Revenue
Service  (IRS) to  the effect  that the  Fund's investments  in options  on U.S.
Government securities, in futures contracts on U.S. Government securities and in
options thereon will  in effect  be treated  as investments  in U.S.  Government
securities  for purposes  of requirements  (a) and  (c) above,  and that certain
constructive gains realized  on such  investments as  a result  of marking  such
investments  to  market  will  not  constitute  gains  from  the  sale  or other
disposition of  a security  held for  less than  three months.  Receipt of  this
ruling  has ameliorated,  but did  not eliminate,  the impact  of Subchapter M's
limitation on gains from the sale of securities held for less than three months.
Under the Internal  Revenue Code, gains  from options and  futures derived  with
respect  to the Fund's business of  investing in U.S. Government securities will
be treated as gains from the sale  of securities for the purpose of  requirement
(a)  above. In  addition, under  the Internal Revenue  Code, to  the extent that
certain options, short sales and other  instruments are considered to be a  part
of  "designated hedge," increases or decreases in the values of such instruments
may be netted against increases or decreases  in the value of the securities  so
hedged may be netted for the purpose of requirement (b) above.

    As  a regulated investment company, the Fund  will not be subject to federal
income tax on  its net  investment income  and capital  gains, if  any, that  it
distributes   to  its  shareholders,  provided  (among  other  things)  that  it
distributes at least 90% of its net investment income and net short-term capital
gains earned in each  taxable year. Distributions of  net investment income  and
net  short-term capital gains will be taxable to shareholders at ordinary income
rates  regardless  of  whether   shareholders  receive  such  distributions   in
additional  shares or in cash. Distributions  of net long-term capital gains, if
any, are taxable as long-term  capital gains regardless of whether  shareholders
receive  such  distributions  in additional  shares  or  in cash;  this  is true
regardless of how long an investor has held his or her Fund shares. However,  if
a  shareholder holds shares in  the Fund for not more  than six months, then any
loss recognized on the sale of such shares will be treated as long-term  capital
loss  to  the extent  of any  distribution on  the shares  which was  treated as
long-term capital gain. Shareholders will be notified annually by the Fund as to
the federal tax  status of distributions  made by the  Fund. A 4%  nondeductible
excise  tax will be  imposed on the  Fund to the  extent the Fund  does not meet
certain  distribution  requirements   by  the   end  of   each  calendar   year.
Distributions  may be subject to additional  state and local taxes. Shareholders
are urged to  consult their own  tax advisers with  respect to their  individual
circumstances.

    Any loss realized on a sale, redemption or exchange of shares of the Fund by
a  shareholder will be disallowed to the extent the shares are replaced within a
61-day period  (beginning 30  days  before the  disposition of  shares).  Shares
purchased  pursuant  to  the  reinvestment  of  a  dividend  will  constitute  a
replacement of shares.

    A shareholder  who  acquires shares  of  the  Fund and  sells  or  otherwise
disposes  of such  shares within 90  days of  acquisition may not  be allowed to
include certain sales charges incurred in acquiring such shares for purposes  of
calculating gain or loss realized upon a sale or exchange of shares of the Fund.

    For federal income tax purposes, the Fund has a capital loss carryforward as
of  October 31, 1993 of approximately  $9,319,000 of which $1,017,000 expires in
1997 and $8,302,000 expires in 1998. Accordingly, no capital gains  distribution
is  expected to be  paid to shareholders  until net gains  have been realized in
excess of such carryforward.

    The per share dividends on Class B and Class C shares will be lower than the
per share dividends  and distributions  on Class  A shares  as a  result of  the
higher  distribution-related fee applicable  to the Class B  and Class C shares.
The per share distributions of capital gains, if any, will be in the same amount
for Class A, Class B and Class C shares.

    LISTED  OPTIONS  AND  FUTURES.  Exchange-traded  futures  contracts,  listed
options  on futures contracts  and listed options  on U.S. Government securities
constitute "Section 1256  contracts" under  the Internal  Revenue Code.  Section
1256  contracts are required to  be "marked-to-market" at the  end of the Fund's
tax year; that is, treated as having been sold at market value. Sixty percent of
any gain or loss recognized as a  result of such "deemed sales" will be  treated
as  long-term  capital  gain  or  loss and  the  remainder  will  be  treated as
short-term capital gain or loss. The  Fund has received a private letter  ruling
that a "deemed sale" of a security held for less than three months at the end of
a  tax year will  not result in gain  from the sale of  securities held for less
than three months  for purposes of  determining qualification of  the Fund as  a
regulated  investment company. In addition, to  the extent that the Section 1256
contracts are considered to be part of a "designated hedge" with U.S. Government
securities,

                                      B-26
<PAGE>
pursuant to regulations to be promulgated  under the Internal Revenue Code,  the
increases or decreases in the value of the Section 1256 contract would be netted
with  the  increases or  decreases  in the  U.S.  Government securities  for the
purpose of determining gains from securities held for less than three months.

    If the Fund holds a  U.S. Government security which  is offset by a  Section
1256  contract, the Fund is considered to  hold a "mixed straddle." The Fund may
elect whether to make a straddle-by-straddle identification of mixed  straddles.
By  electing to identify its mixed straddles, the Fund can avoid the application
of  certain  rules  which  could,  in  some  circumstances,  cause  deferral  or
disallowance  of losses, the  change of long-term  capital gains into short-term
capital gains, or the change of short-term capital losses into long-term capital
losses but would subject itself to the following rules.

    If the  Fund owns  a U.S.  Government security  and acquires  an  offsetting
Section  1256 contract in a  transaction which the Fund  elects to identify as a
mixed straddle,  the  acquisition of  the  offsetting position  will  result  in
recognition of the unrealized gain or loss on the U.S. Government security. This
gain  or loss will be long-term or short-term depending on the holding period of
the security at the time the mixed straddle is entered into. This recognition of
unrealized gain or loss will be taken into account, however, in determining  the
amount  of income available for the  Fund's annual distributions, and can result
in an amount which is greater or  less than the Fund's net realized gains  being
available for such distributions. If an amount which is less than the Fund's net
realized  gains is available for distribution,  the Fund may elect to distribute
more than such  available amount, up  to the  full amount of  such net  realized
gains.

    The  rules for determining whether gain or loss upon exercise, expiration or
termination of  an  identified mixed  straddle  will be  treated  as  long-term,
short-term,  or 60% long-term and 40%  short-term are complex. In general, which
treatment applies will depend upon the order of disposition of the Section  1256
and  the non-Section 1256 positions of a  straddle and whether all or fewer than
all of such positions are disposed of on any day.

    If the Fund does not elect to  identify a mixed straddle, no recognition  of
gain  or loss  on the  U.S. Government securities  in the  Fund's portfolio will
result when the mixed straddle is entered into. However, any losses realized  on
the  straddle  will be  governed by  a number  of tax  rules which  might, under
certain circumstances, defer or disallow the losses in whole or in part,  change
long-term  gains  into  short-term  gains,  or  change  short-term  losses  into
long-term losses. A deferral or disallowance  of recognition of a realized  loss
may  result in  an amount  being available  for the  Fund's annual distributions
which is greater than the Fund's net realized gains.

    The Fund may also elect under  Section 1256(d) of the Internal Revenue  Code
that  the provisions of Section  1256 will not apply  to mixed straddles. In the
case of such an election, the taxation of options on U.S. Government  securities
will  parallel the taxation of OTC Options  discussed below, and the taxation of
futures will be governed by provisions of the Internal Revenue Code dealing with
taxation of capital assets generally.

    OTC OPTIONS.  OTC  Options,  I.E., non-listed  options  on  U.S.  Government
securities, are not Section 1256 contracts. If an OTC Option written by the Fund
on U.S. Government securities expires, the amount of the premium will be treated
as  short-term  capital gain.  If  the option  is  terminated through  a closing
purchase transaction, the  Fund will  generally recognize  a short-term  capital
gain  or loss, depending on  whether the premium income  is greater or less than
the amount  paid by  the Fund  in the  closing transaction.  If U.S.  Government
securities  are delivered by the Fund upon exercise of a written call option, or
sold to the Fund  upon exercise of  a written put  option, the premium  received
when  the option  was written  will be  treated as  an addition  to the proceeds
received in the case of the call option, or a decrease in the cost basis of  the
security  received in the case of a put option. The gain or loss realized on the
exercise of a written call option will be long-term or short-term depending upon
the holding period of the U.S. Government security delivered.

    The  premium  paid  for  a  purchased  put  or  call  option  is  a  capital
expenditure,  and loss will be realized on the expiration, and gain or loss will
be realized upon the sale of, a put or call option. The characterization of  the
gain  or loss as short-term or long-term  will depend upon the holding period of
the option.  If  U.S. Government  securities  are  purchased by  the  Fund  upon
exercise of a purchased call option, or delivered by the Fund upon exercise of a
purchased  put option, the  premium paid when  the option was  purchased will be
treated as an addition to the basis of the securities purchased in the case of a
call option,  or as  a decrease  in  the proceeds  received for  the  securities
delivered in the case of a put option.

    Losses  realized on  straddles which  include a  purchased put  option, can,
under certain circumstances,  be subject to  a number of  tax rules which  might
defer  or disallow the losses  in whole or in  part, change long-term gains into
short-term gains, or change  short-term losses into  long-term losses. As  noted
above,  a deferral or disallowance of recognition of realized loss can result in
an amount which is  greater than the Fund's  net realized gains being  available
for annual distributions.

                                      B-27
<PAGE>
                        ORGANIZATION AND CAPITALIZATION

    The  Fund was initially incorporated in  Maryland on September 19, 1985. The
Fund was subsequently reorganized as  a Massachusetts business trust on  October
2,  1986 as  Prudential-Bache Government  Plus Fund  II. On  July 12,  1989, the
Fund's shareholders voted  to change the  name of the  Fund to  Prudential-Bache
U.S.  Government Fund. On December  6, 1991, the Fund's  name was changed to its
current name, Prudential U.S. Government Fund. The Declaration of Trust and  the
By-Laws of the Fund are designed to make the Fund similar in certain respects to
a  Massachusetts business corporation. The principal distinction between the two
forms relates to shareholder liability. Under Massachusetts law, shareholders of
a business trust  may, in certain  circumstances, be held  personally liable  as
partners  for the obligations of the Fund  beyond the amount of their investment
in the Fund, which is  not the case with a  corporation. The Fund believes  that
this  risk is not material.  The Declaration of Trust  of the Fund provides that
shareholders shall not  be subject  to any personal  liability for  the acts  or
obligations  of the Fund and that every written obligation, contract, instrument
or undertaking made by the Fund shall contain a provision to the effect that the
shareholders are not individually bound thereunder.

    Counsel for the Fund  has advised the Fund  that no personal liability  with
respect to contract obligations will attach to shareholders when adequate notice
of such provision of the Declaration of Trust is given, except possibly in a few
jurisdictions.  With respect to all types  of claims in the latter jurisdictions
and with respect to tort claims, contract claims when the provision referred  to
is  omitted  from  the  undertaking,  claims  for  taxes  and  certain statutory
liabilities, a shareholder  may be  held personally  liable to  the extent  that
claims  are  not  satisfied by  the  Fund.  However, upon  payment  of  any such
liability the shareholder  will be  entitled to reimbursement  from the  general
assets of the Fund. The Trustees intend to conduct the operations of the Fund in
such  a  way as  to avoid,  to the  extent possible,  ultimate liability  of the
shareholders for liabilities of the Fund.

    The Declaration of Trust further provides that no Trustee, officer, employee
or agent of  the Fund is  liable to  the Fund or  to a shareholder,  nor is  any
Trustee,  officer, employee or  agent liable to any  third persons in connection
with the affairs of the  Fund, except as such liability  may arise from his  own
bad  faith, willful misfeasance, gross negligence,  or reckless disregard of his
duties. It also provides that  all third parties shall  look solely to the  Fund
property  for satisfaction of  claims arising in connection  with the affairs of
the Fund.  With the  exceptions stated,  the Declaration  of Trust  permits  the
Trustees  to provide for the indemnification of Trustees, officers, employees or
agents of the Fund against all liability  in connection with the affairs of  the
Fund.

 CUSTODIAN, TRANSFER AND DIVIDEND DISBURSING AGENT AND INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

    State  Street  Bank and  Trust Company,  One  Heritage Drive,  North Quincy,
Massachusetts, 02171 serves as Custodian for the Fund's portfolio securities and
cash and in that capacity maintains  certain financial and accounting books  and
records  pursuant  to  an  agreement  with  the  Fund.  See  "How  the  Fund  is
Managed--Custodian  and  Transfer   and  Dividend  Disbursing   Agent"  in   the
Prospectus.

    Prudential Mutual Fund Services, Inc. (PMFS), Raritan Plaza One, Edison, New
Jersey  08837, serves as the Transfer and Dividend Disbursing Agent of the Fund.
Its mailing address  is P.O. Box  15005, New Brunswick,  New Jersey  08906-5005.
PMFS  is  a wholly-owned  subsidiary of  PMF.  PMFS provides  customary transfer
agency  services   to  the   Fund,  including   the  handling   of   shareholder
communications,  the processing of shareholder  transactions, the maintenance of
shareholder account records, payment of dividends and distributions, and related
functions. For  these services,  PMFS  receives an  annual fee  per  shareholder
account,  a new account  set-up fee for each  manually-established account and a
monthly inactive zero balance account fee per shareholder account. PMFS is  also
reimbursed for its out-of-pocket expenses, including but not limited to postage,
stationery, printing, allocable communications expenses and other costs. For the
fiscal  year ended  October 31,  1993, the  Fund incurred  fees of approximately
$215,000 for the services of PMFS.

    Deloitte & Touche, 1633  Broadway, New York, New  York 10019, serves as  the
Fund's  independent accountants  and in that  capacity audits  the Fund's annual
financial statements.

                                      B-28
<PAGE>

PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND   PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                APRIL 30, 1994 (UNAUDITED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------------
 PRINCIPAL
  AMOUNT                                        VALUE
  (000)              DESCRIPTION               (NOTE 1)
- -----------------------------------------------------------
<C>          <S>                              <C>
             LONG-TERM INVESTMENTS--98.0%
             U. S. TREASURY SECURITIES--19.1%
             U.S. Treasury Bonds,
 $ 2,500       10.75%, 8/15/05..............  $  3,180,475
   6,400(D)    12.00%, 8/15/13..............     8,984,000
   6,000(D)    11.25%, 2/15/15..............     8,385,000
             U.S. Treasury Notes,
   1,000       3.875%, 9/30/95..............       979,840
   1,000(D)    7.75%, 3/31/96...............     1,036,410
   3,000(D)    6.75%, 5/31/97...............     3,045,480
             Zero Coupon Treasury Bonds,
  16,000       Zero Coupon, 11/15/15........     3,153,600
                                              ------------
             Total U. S. Treasury Securities
               (cost $30,343,967)...........    28,764,805
                                              ------------
             U. S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES--19.8%
             Federal National Mortgage Assoc.,
  40,000       Zero Coupon, 7/05/14.........     8,350,000
             Resolution Funding Corp.,
  15,000       8.875%, 7/15/20..............    17,310,900
             Tennessee Valley Auth.,
   4,000       8.75%, 10/01/19..............     4,240,000
                                              ------------
             Total U. S. Government Agencies
               (cost $26,943,997)...........    29,900,900
                                              ------------
             MORTGAGE-RELATED SECURITIES--31.0%
             Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.,
   1,500       7.50%, 9/15/05, (CMO)........     1,511,715
   2,200       7.50%, 7/15/07, (CMO)........     2,222,000
             Federal National Mortgage Assoc.,
   3,475       11.00%, 11/01/00.............     3,872,179
   3,944       8.50%, 3/25/09, (CMO)........     3,998,955
   5,000       6.50%, 7/25/20, (CMO)........     4,601,550
   5,000       8.25%, 3/25/21, (CMO)........     5,145,300
  17,500       7.00%, 11/01/23 - 5/01/24....    16,531,900
             Government National Mortgage Assoc.,
   2,789       9.00%, 11/15/15 - 8/15/21....     2,901,346
   2,983       8.50%, 11/15/20 - 6/15/24....     3,045,356
             Nomura Asset Securities Corp.,
   3,000       Ser. 94, Class A,
               7.53%, 1/15/01...............     2,973,750
                                              ------------
             Total Mortgage-Related Securities
               (cost $46,982,559)...........    46,804,051
                                              ------------
             CORPORATE BONDS--22.1%
             DOMESTIC--18.0%
             Bausch & Lomb, Inc.,
   3,500       6.80%, 12/12/96..............     3,533,915
               (Medical supplies)
             Coles Myer Finance,
   2,000       6.47%, 2/18/04...............     1,823,900
               (Financial services)
             Comsat Corp.,
   3,000       8.125%, 4/01/04..............     3,077,010
               (Telecommunications)
             Dean Witter Discover & Co.,
   1,500       6.00%, 3/01/98...............     1,441,155
               (Financial services)
             Ford Motor Credit Co.,
   2,000       6.25%, 2/26/98...............     1,944,620
               (Financial services)
             Georgia Power Co.,
   2,000       4.75%, 3/01/96...............     1,952,960
               (Electric utility)
             Hoechst Celanese Corp.,
   2,000       6.125%, 2/01/04..............     1,803,718
               (Miscellaneous)
             NationsBank Corp.,
   2,500       6.625%, 1/15/98..............     2,481,550
               (Financial services)
             Republic N.Y. Corp.,
   2,000       9.70%, 2/01/09...............     2,290,380
               (Financial services)
             Star Bank,
   1,500       6.375%, 3/01/04..............     1,368,720
               (Financial services)
             USLIFE Corp.,
   2,000       6.375%, 6/15/00..............     1,897,820
               (Insurance)
- -----------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>


                                     B-29     See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------------
 PRINCIPAL
  AMOUNT                                        VALUE
  (000)              DESCRIPTION               (NOTE 1)
- -----------------------------------------------------------
<C>          <S>                              <C>
             CORPORATE BONDS (CONT'D.)
             Zeneca Wilmington, Inc.,
 $ 2,000       6.30%, 6/15/03...............  $  1,819,500
               (Pharmaceuticals)
             Zurich Reinsurance Centre
               Holdings, Inc.,
   2,000       7.125%, 10/15/23.............     1,722,820
               (Insurance)
                                              ------------
             Total Domestic Corporate Bonds
               (cost $29,192,269)...........    27,158,068
                                              ------------
             YANKEE--4.1%
             Australia & New Zealand Banking
               Group,
   3,000       6.25%, 2/01/04...............     2,709,780
               (Financial services)
             Hanson PLC.,
   2,000       7.375%, 1/15/03..............     1,951,660
               (Miscellaneous)
             Svenska Handelsbanken,
   1,500       8.125%, 8/15/07..............     1,517,655
               (Financial services)
                                              ------------
             Total Yankee Corporate Bonds
               (cost $6,593,442)............     6,179,095
                                              ------------
             Total Corporate Bonds
               (cost $35,785,711)...........    33,337,163
                                              ------------
             FOREIGN GOVERNMENT BONDS*--2.6%
             Province of Quebec,
   2,000       9.125%, 3/01/00..............     2,169,620
             Republic of Italy,
   2,000       6.875%, 9/27/23..............     1,691,780
                                              ------------
             Total Foreign Government Bonds
               (cost $4,185,700)............     3,861,400
                                              ------------
             ASSET BACKED SECURITIES--3.4%
             Chase Manhattan Credit Card
               Trust,
   5,000       7.40%, 5/15/00
               (cost $4,993,900)............     5,106,250
                                              ------------
             Total Long-Term Investments
               (cost $149,235,834)..........   147,774,569
                                              ------------
             SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT
             REPURCHASE AGREEMENT--12.4%
             Joint Repurchase Agreement
               Account,
  18,630       3.54%, 5/02/94, (Note 5)
               (cost $18,630,000)...........    18,630,000
                                              ------------
             TOTAL INVESTMENTS--110.4%
               (cost $167,865,834; Note 4)..   166,404,569
             Liabilities in excess of other
               assets--(10.4%)..............   (15,656,625)
                                              ------------
             NET ASSETS--100%...............  $150,747,944
                                              ------------
                                              ------------
<FN>
- ---------------
CMO--Collateralized Mortgage Obligations.
(D) Entire principal amount segregated for dollar rolls.
* U.S. dollar denominated.
- ------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>


                                     B-30     See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>

- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
(UNAUDITED)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

ASSETS                                                                                          APRIL 30, 1994
                                                                                               ----------------
<S>                                                                                             <C>
Investments, at value (cost $167,865,834)...................................................     $166,404,569
Interest receivable.........................................................................        1,702,277
Receivable for Fund shares sold.............................................................          274,061
Other assets................................................................................            7,026
                                                                                                -------------
  Total assets..............................................................................      168,387,933
                                                                                                -------------
LIABILITIES
Payable for Investments purchased...........................................................       16,646,875
Payable for Fund shares reacquired..........................................................          489,729
Dividends payable...........................................................................          228,176
Accrued expenses............................................................................          109,672
Distribution fee payable....................................................................          102,663
Management fee payable......................................................................           62,874
                                                                                                -------------
  Total liabilities.........................................................................       17,639,989
                                                                                                -------------
NET ASSETS..................................................................................     $150,747,944
                                                                                                -------------
                                                                                                -------------

Net assets were comprised of:
  Shares of beneficial interest, at par.....................................................     $    156,431
  Paid-in capital in excess of par..........................................................      161,992,003
                                                                                                -------------
                                                                                                  162,148,434
  Accumulated net realized losses on investments............................................       (9,939,225)
  Net unrealized depreciation on investments................................................       (1,461,265)
                                                                                                -------------
NET ASSETS AT APRIL 30, 1994................................................................     $150,747,944
                                                                                                -------------
                                                                                                -------------
Class A:
  Net asset value and redemption price per share
    ($7,300,950 / 757,980 shares of beneficial interest issued and outstanding).............           $ 9.63
  Maximum sales charge (4.5% of offering price).............................................              .45
                                                                                                       ------
  Maximum offering price to public..........................................................           $10.08
                                                                                                       ------
                                                                                                       ------
Class B:
  Net asset value, offering price and redemption price per share
    ($143,446,994 / 14,885,109 shares of beneficial interest issued and outstanding)........           $ 9.64
                                                                                                       ------
                                                                                                       ------
</TABLE>

See Notes to Financial Statements.


                                     B-31
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------
PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
(UNAUDITED)
- --------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            SIX MONTHS
                                              ENDED
                                            APRIL 30,
 NET INVESTMENT INCOME                         1994
                                          -------------
<S>                                       <C>
Income
  Interest and discount earned.........   $  5,706,729
                                          ------------
Expenses
  Distribution fee--Class A............          5,284
  Distribution fee--Class B............        721,179
  Management fee.......................        405,992
  Transfer agent's fees and expenses...        136,000
  Custodian's fees and expenses........         60,000
  Trustees' fees.......................         27,000
  Registration fees....................         22,000
  Audit fee............................         15,000
  Shareholder reports..................         15,000
  Legal fees...........................         12,000
  Miscellaneous........................          4,937
                                          ------------
    Total expenses.....................      1,424,392
                                          ------------
Net investment income..................      4,282,337
                                          ------------
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED LOSS
ON INVESTMENTS
  Net realized loss on investment
  transactions.........................         (8,266)
  Net change in unrealized appreciation
    (depreciation) on investments......    (15,377,149)
                                          ------------
Net loss on investments................    (15,385,415)
                                          ------------
NET DECREASE IN NET ASSETS RESULTING
FROM OPERATIONS........................   $(11,103,078)
                                          ------------
                                          ------------
</TABLE>

See Notes to Financial Statements.

- --------------------------------------------------------
PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
(UNAUDITED)
- --------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                               SIX MONTHS         YEAR
                                 ENDED           ENDED
INCREASE (DECREASE)            APRIL 30,      OCTOBER 31,
IN NET ASSETS                     1994            1993
                              ------------    ------------
<S>                           <C>             <C>
Operations
  Net investment income.....  $  4,282,337    $  9,312,413
  Net realized gain (loss)
    on investments..........        (8,266)      6,101,139
  Net change in unrealized
   appreciation/depreciation
    on investments..........   (15,377,149)      8,892,501
                              ------------    ------------
  Net increase (decrease) in
    net assets
    resulting from
    operations..............   (11,103,078)     24,306,053
                              ------------    ------------
  Dividends to shareholders
    from net
    investment income
    (Note1).................
    Class A.................      (202,512)       (402,303)
    Class B.................    (4,079,825)     (8,910,110)
                              ------------    ------------
                                (4,282,337)     (9,312,413)
                              ------------    ------------
Fund share transactions
  (Note 6)
  Net proceeds from shares
    subscribed..............    28,942,465      83,709,350
  Net asset value of shares
    issued in reinvestment
    of dividends............     2,772,324       6,045,712
  Cost of shares
    reacquired..............   (39,336,936)    (91,160,162)
                              ------------    ------------
  Net decrease in net assets
    from Fund share
    transactions............    (7,622,147)     (1,405,100)
                              ------------    ------------
Total increase (decrease)...   (23,007,562)     13,588,540

NET ASSETS

Beginning of period.........   173,755,506     160,166,966
                              ------------    ------------
End of period...............  $150,747,944    $173,755,506
                              ------------    ------------
                              ------------    ------------
</TABLE>

See Notes to Financial Statements.
                                     B-32
<PAGE>

- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   Prudential U.S. Government Fund (the ``Fund'') was organized as a
Massachusetts business trust on October 2, 1986. Investment operations commenced
on November 7, 1986. The Fund's primary investment objective is to seek a high
total return, capital appreciation plus high current income, primarily through
investment in U.S. Government securities and obligations issued or guaranteed by
U.S. Government agencies or instrumentalities. The ability of issuers of debt
securities, other than those issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, may be
affected by economic developments in a specific industry or region.

NOTE 1. ACCOUNTING            The following is a summary of
POLICIES                      significant accounting policies followed
                              by the Fund in the preparation of its
financial statements.

SECURITY VALUATION: The Board of Trustees has authorized the use of an
independent pricing service to determine valuations for normal institutional
size trading units of securities. The pricing service considers such factors as
security prices, yields, maturities, call features, ratings and developments
relating to specific securities in arriving at securities valuations. Options
and financial futures contracts listed on exchanges are valued at their closing
price on the applicable exchange. When market quotations are not readily
available, a security is valued at fair value as determined in good faith by or
under the direction of the Board of Trustees.

   Short-term securities which mature in more than 60 days are valued at current
market quotations. Short-term securities which mature in 60 days or less are
valued at amortized cost which approximates market value.

   In connection with transactions in repurchase agreements, it is the Fund's
policy that its custodian or designated subcustodians, as the case may be under
triparty repurchase agreements, take possession of the underlying collateral
securities, the value of which exceeds the principal amount of the repurchase
transaction, including accrued interest. To the extent that any repurchase
transaction exceeds one business day, the value of the collateral is
marked-to-market on a daily basis to ensure the adequacy of the collateral. If
the seller defaults, and the value of the collateral declines or if bankruptcy
proceedings are commenced with respect to the seller of the security,
realization of the collateral by the Fund may be delayed or limited.

DOLLAR ROLLS: The Fund enters into dollar rolls in which the Fund sells
securities for delivery in the current month and simultaneously contracts to
repurchase somewhat similar securities on a specified future date. During the
roll period the Fund forgoes principal and interest paid on the securities. The
Fund is compensated by the interest earned on the cash proceeds of the initial
sale and by the lower repurchase price at the future date.

SECURITIES TRANSACTIONS AND INVESTMENT INCOME: Securities transactions are
recorded on the trade date. Realized gains or losses on sales of investments are
calculated on the identified cost basis. Interest income is recorded on the
accrual basis.

   Net investment income, other than distribution fees, and unrealized and
realized gains or losses are allocated daily to each class of shares based upon
the relative proportion of net assets of each class at the beginning of the day.

FEDERAL INCOME TAXES: It is the Fund's policy to continue to meet the
requirements of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to regulated investment
companies and to distribute all of its taxable net income to its shareholders.
Therefore, no federal income tax provision is required.

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Dividends from net investment income are accrued
daily and payable monthly. The Fund will distribute annually any net realized
capital gains in excess of capital loss carry-forwards, if any. Dividends and
distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

   Income distributions and capital gains distributions are determined in
accordance with income tax regulations which may differ from generally accepted
accounting principles.

NOTE 2. AGREEMENTS            The Fund has a management agreement with
                              Prudential Mutual Fund Management, Inc. ("PMF").
Pursuant to this agreement, PMF has responsibility for all investment advisory
services and supervises the subadviser's performance of such services. PMF has
entered into a subadvisory agreement with The Prudential Investment Corporation
("PIC"); PIC furnishes investment advisory services in connection with the
management of the Fund. PMF pays for the cost of the subadviser's services, the
compensation of officers of the Fund, occupancy and certain clerical and
bookkeeping costs of the Fund. The Fund bears all other costs and expenses.


                                     B-33
<PAGE>

   The management fee paid PMF is computed daily and payable monthly at an
annual rate of .50 of 1% of the Fund's average daily net assets.

   The Fund has distribution agreements with Prudential Mutual Fund
Distributors, Inc. ("PMFD"), which acts as the distributor of the Class A
shares of the Fund, and Prudential Securities Incorporated ("PSI"), which acts
as distributor of the Class B shares of the Fund (collectively the
"Distributors"). To reimburse the Distributors for their expenses incurred in
distributing the Fund's Class A and B shares, the Fund, pursuant to plans of
distribution, pays the Distributors a reimbursement, accrued daily and payable
monthly.

   Pursuant to the Class A Plan, the Fund reimburses PMFD for its
distribution-related expenses with respect to Class A shares, accrued daily and
payable monthly, at an annual rate of up to .30 of 1% of the average daily net
assets of the Class A shares. Such expenses under the Class A Plan were .15 of
1% of the average daily net assets of the Class A shares for the period ended
April 30, 1994. PMFD pays various broker-dealers, including PSI and Pruco
Securities Corporation ("Prusec"), affiliated broker-dealers, for account
servicing fees and other expenses incurred by such broker-dealers.

   Pursuant to the Class B Plan, the Fund reimburses PSI for its
distribution-related expenses with respect to the Class B shares, accrued daily
and paid monthly, at an annual rate of up to 1% of the average daily net assets
of the Class B shares. Such expenses under the Class B Plan were 1% of the
average daily net assets of the Class B shares for the three months ended
January 31, 1994. Effective February 1, 1994, the Class B Plan distribution
expenses were decreased to .85 of 1% of the average daily net assets.

   The Class B distribution expenses include commission credits for payments of
commissions and account servicing fees to financial advisers and an allocation
for overhead and other distribution-related expenses, interest and/or carrying
charges, the cost of printing and mailing prospectuses to potential investors
and of advertising incurred in connection with the distribution of shares.

   The Distributors recover the distribution expenses and service fees incurred
through the receipt of reimbursement payments from the Fund under the Plans and
the receipt of initial sales charges (Class A only) and contingent deferred
sales charges (Class B only) from shareholders.

   PMFD has advised the Fund that it has received approximately $44,300 in
front-end sales charges resulting from sales of Class A shares during the six
months ended April 30, 1994. From these fees, PMFD paid such sales charges to
dealers which in turn paid commissions to sales persons.

   With respect to the Class B Plan, at any given time the amount of expenses
incurred by PSI in distributing the Fund's shares and not recovered through the
imposition of contingent deferred sales charges in connection with certain
redemptions of shares may exceed the total reimbursement made by the Fund
pursuant to the Class B Plan. For the six months ended April 30, 1994, PSI
advised the Fund that it received approximately $181,600 in contingent deferred
sales charges imposed upon redemptions by shareholders. PSI, as distributor, has
also advised the Fund that at April 30, 1994, the amount of distribution
expenses incurred by PSI and not yet reimbursed by the Fund or recovered through
contingent deferred sales charges approximated $66,400. This amount may be
recovered through future payments under the Class B Plan or contingent deferred
sales charges.

   In the event of termination or noncontinuation of the Class B Plan, the Fund
would not be contractually obligated to pay PSI, as distributor, for any
expenses not previously reimbursed or recovered through contingent deferred
sales charges.

   PMFD is a wholly-owned subsidiary of PMF; PSI, PMF and PIC are indirect,
wholly-owned subsidiaries of The Prudential Insurance Company of America.

NOTE 3. OTHER                 Prudential Mutual Fund Services, Inc. ("PMFS"),a
TRANSACTIONS                  wholly-owned subsidiary of PMF, serves as the
WITH AFFILIATES               Fund's transfer agent. During the six months ended
                              April 30, 1994, the Fund incurred fees of
approximately $115,000 for the services of PMFS. As of April 30, 1994,
approximately $23,000 of such fees were due to PMFS. Transfer agent fees and
expenses in the Statement of Operations include certain out-of-pocket expenses
paid to non-affiliates.

NOTE 4. PORTFOLIO             Purchases and sales of investment securities,
SECURITIES                    other than short-term investments, for the six
                              months ended April 30, 1994 were $38,430,746 and
$43,042,396, respectively.

   The federal income tax basis of the Fund's investments at April 30, 1994 was
substantially the same as the basis for financial statement reporting purposes
and, accordingly, net unrealized depreciation of investments for federal income
tax purposes was $1,461,265 (gross unrealized appreciation-$3,630,850; gross
unrealized depreciation-$5,092,115).

   For federal income tax purposes, the Fund has a capital loss carryforward as
of October 31, 1993 of approximately $9,319,000 of which $1,017,000 expires in
1997 and $8,302,000 expires in 1998. Accordingly, no capital gains


                                      B-34
<PAGE>

distribution is expected to be paid to shareholders until net gains have been
realized in excess of such carryforward.

NOTE 5. JOINT                 The Fund, along with other affiliated registered
REPURCHASE                    investment companies, transfers uninvested cash
AGREEMENT ACCOUNT             balances into a single joint account, the daily
                              aggregate balance of which is invested in one or
more repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. Treasury or federal agency
obligations. At April 30, 1994, the Fund had a 1.90% undivided interest in the
repurchase agreements in the joint account. The undivided interest for the Fund
represented $18,630,000 in principal amount. As of such date, each repurchase
agreement in the joint account and the value of the collateral therefor were as
follows:

   Barclays de Zoete Wedd, Inc., 3.55%, in the principal amount of $53,000,000,
repurchase price $53,015,679, due 5/2/94. The value of the collateral including
accrued interest is $54,060,428.

   Goldman Sachs & Co., 3.50%, in the principal amount of $315,000,000,
repurchase price $315,091,875, due 5/2/94. The value of the collateral including
accrued interest is $321,300,231.

   Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., 3.55%, in the principal amount
of $315,000,000, repurchase price $315,093,188, due 5/2/94. The value of the
collateral including accrued interest is $321,300,584.

   Morgan (J.P.) Securities, Inc., 3.58%, in the principal amount of
$295,000,000, repurchase price $295,088,008, due 5/2/94. The value of the
collateral including accrued interest is $300,901,625.

NOTE 6. CAPITAL               The Fund offers both Class A and Class B shares.
                              Class A shares are sold with a front-end sales
charge of up to 4.5%. Class B shares are sold with a contingent deferred sales
charge which declines from 5% to zero depending on the period of time the shares
are held. Both classes of shares have equal earnings, assets and voting
privileges except that each class bears different distribution expenses and has
exclusive voting rights with respect to its distribution plan.

   The Fund has authorized an unlimited number of shares of beneficial interest
of each class at $.01 par value. Transactions in shares of beneficial interest
for the six months ended April 30, 1994 and for the fiscal year ended October
31, 1993 were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Class A                               Shares          Amount
- --------------------------------  --------------   ------------
<S>                               <C>              <C>
Six months ended April 30, 1994:
Shares sold.....................         207,140   $  2,079,120
Shares issued in reinvestment of
  dividends.....................          13,643        137,976
Shares reacquired...............        (109,533)    (1,102,102)
                                  --------------   ------------
Net increase in shares
  outstanding...................         111,250   $  1,114,994
                                  --------------   ------------
                                  --------------   ------------
Year ended October 31, 1993:
Shares sold.....................         750,713   $  7,553,655
Shares issued in reinvestment of
  dividends.....................          26,658        272,022
Shares reacquired...............        (649,104)    (6,560,954)
                                  --------------   ------------
Net increase in shares
  outstanding...................         128,267   $  1,264,723
                                  --------------   ------------
                                  --------------   ------------
Class B
- --------------------------------
Six months ended Apri 30, 1994:
Shares sold.....................       2,643,899   $ 26,863,345
Shares issued in reinvestment of
  dividends.....................         259,839      2,634,348
Shares reacquired...............      (3,770,929)   (38,234,834)
                                  --------------   ------------
Net decrease in shares
  outstanding...................        (867,191)  $ (8,737,141)
                                  --------------   ------------
                                  --------------   ------------
Year ended October 31, 1993:
Shares sold.....................       7,467,812   $ 76,155,695
Shares issued in reinvestment of
  dividends.....................         565,555      5,773,690
Shares reacquired...............      (8,280,106)   (84,599,208)
                                  --------------   ------------
Net decrease in shares
  outstanding...................        (246,739)  $ (2,669,823)
                                  --------------   ------------
                                  --------------   ------------
</TABLE>
- -------------
These financial statements are unaudited and reflect all adjustments
(consisting only of normal recurring adjustments) which are, in the
opinion of management, necessary for a fair presentation of the results
for the interim period presented.

                                     B-35
<PAGE>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
(UNAUDITED)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                               CLASS A                                                       CLASS B
         ----------------------------------------------------   -----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 JANUARY 22,
         SIX MONTHS                                 1990        SIX MONTHS
           ENDED       YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31,      THROUGH        ENDED                     YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31,
         APRIL 30,    ------------------------   OCTOBER 31,    APRIL 30,    ----------------------------------------------------
            1994       1993     1992     1991        1990          1994        1993       1992       1991       1990       1989
         ----------   ------   ------   ------   ------------   ----------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------
<S>         <C>     <C>      <C>      <C>         <C>          <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
PER
SHARE
OPERATING
PERFORMANCE:

Net asset
value,
beginning of
period...   $10.59  $ 9.69   $ 9.49   $ 8.97      $ 9.31       $   10.60   $   9.70   $   9.50   $   8.97   $   9.54   $   9.05
            ------  ------   ------   ------      ------       ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------
INCOME
FROM
INVESTMENT
OPERATIONS

Net
investment
income...      .30     .64      .68      .66         .55             .27        .55        .59        .59        .62        .64

Net realized
and unrealized
gain loss) on
investment
trans
actions...    (.96)    .90      .20      .52        (.34)           (.96)       .90        .20        .53       (.57)       .52
            ------  ------   ------   ------      ------       ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------

Total from
investment
operations..  (.66)   1.54      .88     1.18         .21            (.69)      1.45        .79       1.12        .05       1.16
            ------  ------   ------   ------      ------       ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------

LESS
DISTRIBUTIONS

Dividends
from net
investment
income...     (.30)   (.64)    (.68)    (.66)       (.55)           (.27)      (.55)      (.59)      (.59)      (.62)      (.64)

Distributions
from
paid-in-
capital...      --      --       --       --          --              --         --         --         --         --       (.03)
            ------  ------   ------   ------      ------       ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------

Total
distribu
tions...     (.30)    (.64)    (.68)    (.66)       (.55)           (.27)      (.55)      (.59)      (.59)      (.62)      (.67)
            ------  ------   ------   ------      ------       ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------

Net asset
value,
end of
period..    $ 9.63  $10.59   $ 9.69   $ 9.49      $ 8.97       $    9.64   $  10.60   $   9.70   $   9.50   $   8.97   $   9.54
            ------  ------   ------   ------      ------       ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------
            ------  ------   ------   ------      ------       ---------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------

TOTAL
RETURN#...   (6.28)% 16.43%    9.39%   13.72%       2.16%          (6.64)%    15.44%      8.46%     12.86%       .64%     13.53%

RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL
DATA:


Net assets,
end of
period
(000)..     $7,301  $6,849   $5,024   $2,574      $1,617       $ 143,447   $166,907   $155,143   $158,790   $172,521   $169,825

Average
net assets
(000)...    $7,104  $6,339   $3,769   $2,158      $  918       $ 156,639   $162,107   $154,502   $168,421   $174,276   $156,322


Ratios to
average
net assets:

Expenses,
including
distribution
fees...       1.01%*   .96%     .94%    1.24%       1.08%*          1.79%*     1.81%      1.79%      2.09%      1.99%      2.05%

Expenses,
excluding
distribution
fees...        .86%*   .81%     .79%    1.09%        .94%*           .86%*      .81%       .79%      1.09%       .99%      1.06%

Net
investment
income...     6.03%*  6.35%    6.92%    7.24%       7.16%*          5.25%*     5.50%      6.07%      6.39%      6.89%      6.95%

Portfolio
turnover...     24%     66%      66%     236%        608%             24%        66%        66%       236%       608%       392%

<FN>
- ---------------
 * Annualized.
 @ Commencement of offering of Class A shares.
 # Total return does not consider the effects of sales loads. Total return is
   calculated assuming a purchase of shares on the first day and a sale on the
   last day of each period reported and includes reinvestment of dividends and
   distributions. Total returns for periods of less than a full year are not
   annualized.
</TABLE>

See Notes to Financial Statements.


                                      B-36
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND                         PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
                                                                OCTOBER 31, 1993
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PRINCIPAL
 AMOUNT                                                                 VALUE
  (000)                           DESCRIPTION                          (NOTE 1)
- ---------   -------------------------------------------------------  ------------
<C>         <S>                                                      <C>
            LONG-TERM INVESTMENTS--96.5%
            U.S. TREASURY SECURITIES--30.3%
            U.S. Treasury Bonds,
 $ 4,000      10.75%, 8/15/05......................................  $  5,746,880
   6,400      12.00%, 8/15/13......................................    10,206,976
   6,000      11.25%, 2/15/15......................................     9,580,320
   2,030      8.125%, 8/15/19......................................     2,508,309
   4,000      7.875%, 2/15/21......................................     4,836,240
            U.S. Treasury Notes,
   1,000      3.875%, 9/30/95......................................       998,120
   1,000      7.75%, 3/31/96.......................................     1,081,410
   3,000      6.75%, 5/31/97.......................................     3,220,320
   6,000      5.125%, 3/31/98......................................     6,090,960
   4,500      5.125%, 4/30/98......................................     4,564,665
            Zero Coupon Treasury Bonds,
  16,000      Zero Coupon, 11/15/15................................     3,780,319
                                                                     ------------
            Total U.S. Treasury Securities
              (cost $48,552,767)...................................    52,614,519
                                                                     ------------
            U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES--22.7%
            Federal National Mortgage Assoc.,
   5,000      9.80%, 5/10/00.......................................     5,415,600
  40,000      Zero Coupon, 7/05/14.................................     9,700,000
            Resolution Funding Corp.,
  15,000      8.875%, 7/15/20......................................    19,954,650
            Tennessee Valley Auth.,
   4,000      8.75%, 10/01/19......................................     4,368,440
                                                                     ------------
            Total U.S. Government Agencies
              (cost $31,904,386)...................................    39,438,690
                                                                     ------------
            MORTGAGE-RELATED SECURITIES--17.4%
            Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.,
   1,500      7.50%, 9/15/05, (CMO)................................     1,569,375
   2,200      7.50%, 7/15/07, (CMO)................................     2,271,500
            Federal National Mortgage Assoc.,
   5,000      8.50%, 3/25/09, (CMO)................................     5,253,100
      19      Series 111, Class D, (I/O), (CMO)....................        71,009
   5,000      6.50%, 7/25/20, (CMO)................................     4,998,400
   5,000      8.25%, 3/25/21, (CMO)................................     5,328,100
            Government National Mortgage Assoc.,
   6,017      8.50%, 6/15/21.......................................     6,375,168
   4,125      9.00%, 11/15/15-8/15/21..............................     4,403,404
                                                                     ------------
            Total Mortgage-Related Securities
              (cost $29,438,930)...................................    30,270,056
                                                                     ------------
            CORPORATE BONDS--19.3%
            DOMESTIC--15.9%
            Bausch & Lomb, Inc.,
   3,500      6.80%, 12/12/96......................................     3,696,315
            Communications Satellite Corp.,
   3,000      8.125%, 4/01/04......................................     3,434,700
            Dean Witter Discover & Co.,
   1,500      6.00%, 3/01/98.......................................     1,536,810
            Ford Motor Credit Co.,
   2,000      6.25%, 2/26/98.......................................     2,061,740
            Georgia Power Co.,
   2,000      4.75%, 3/01/96.......................................     2,008,820
            Heinz (H.J.) Co.,
   1,500      6.875%, 1/15/03......................................     1,606,845

<CAPTION>
PRINCIPAL
 AMOUNT                                                                 VALUE
  (000)                           DESCRIPTION                          (NOTE 1)
- ---------   -------------------------------------------------------  ------------
<C>         <S>                                                      <C>
            NationsBank Corp.,
 $ 2,500      6.625%, 1/15/98......................................  $  2,629,900
            Republic N.Y. Corp.,
   2,000      9.70%, 2/01/09.......................................     2,610,880
            Southern California Edison Co.,
   2,000      5.875%, 2/01/98......................................     2,051,800
            USLIFE Corp.,
   2,000      6.375%, 6/15/00......................................     2,039,240
            Zeneca Wilmington, Inc.,
   2,000      6.30%, 6/15/03.......................................     2,034,400
            Zurich Reinsurance Centre Holdings, Inc.,
   2,000      7.125%, 10/15/23.....................................     1,962,060
                                                                     ------------
            Total Domestic (cost $27,188,210)......................    27,673,510
                                                                     ------------
            YANKEE--3.4%
            Hanson Plc.,
   2,000      7.735%, 1/15/03......................................     2,168,360
            Pohang Iron & Steel Ltd.,
   2,000      6.625%, 7/01/03......................................     2,021,780
            Svenska Handelsbanken,
   1,500      8.125%, 8/15/07......................................     1,714,950
                                                                     ------------
            Total Yankee
              (cost $5,586,738)....................................     5,905,090
                                                                     ------------
            Total Corporate Bonds
              (cost $32,774,948)...................................    33,578,600
                                                                     ------------
            FOREIGN GOVERNMENT BONDS--3.7%
            Province of British Columbia,
   2,000      7.00%, 1/15/03.......................................     2,159,760
            Province of Quebec,
   2,000      9.125%, 3/01/00......................................     2,355,140
            Republic of Italy,
   2,000      6.875%, 9/27/23......................................     1,970,820
                                                                     ------------
            Total Foreign Government Bonds
              (cost $6,170,820)....................................     6,485,720
                                                                     ------------
            ASSET BACKED SECURITIES--3.1%
            Chase Manhattan Credit Card Trust,
   5,000      7.40%, 5/15/00
              (cost $4,993,900)....................................     5,364,050
                                                                     ------------
            Total Long-Term Investments
              (cost $153,835,751)..................................   167,751,635
                                                                     ------------
            SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT
            TIME DEPOSIT--1.7%
            Fuji Bank, Ltd.,
   2,880      3.00%, 11/01/93
              (cost $2,880,000)....................................     2,880,000
                                                                     ------------
            TOTAL INVESTMENTS--98.2%
              (cost $156,715,751; Note 4)..........................   170,631,635
            Other assets in excess of liabilities--1.8%............     3,123,871
                                                                     ------------
            NET ASSETS--100%.......................................  $173,755,506
                                                                     ------------
                                                                     ------------
<FN>
- ---------------
CMO--Collateralized Mortgage Obligations.
I/O--Interest Only.
</TABLE>

                                      B-37    See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
ASSETS                                                                           OCTOBER 31, 1993
                                                                                 ----------------
<S>                                                                              <C>
Investments, at value (cost $156,715,751)......................................    $170,631,635
Cash...........................................................................       1,539,593
Interest receivable............................................................       2,231,697
Receivable for Fund shares sold................................................         358,070
Other assets...................................................................           3,867
                                                                                 ----------------
    Total assets...............................................................     174,764,862
                                                                                 ----------------

<CAPTION>
LIABILITIES
<S>                                                                              <C>
Payable for Fund shares reacquired.............................................         407,826
Dividends payable..............................................................         256,858
Accrued expenses...............................................................         127,049
Due to Distributors............................................................         143,443
Due to Manager.................................................................          74,180
                                                                                 ----------------
    Total liabilities..........................................................       1,009,356
                                                                                 ----------------
NET ASSETS.....................................................................    $173,755,506
                                                                                 ----------------
                                                                                 ----------------
Net assets were comprised of:
  Shares of beneficial interest, at par........................................    $    163,990
  Paid-in capital in excess of par.............................................     169,606,591
                                                                                 ----------------
                                                                                    169,770,581
  Accumulated net realized losses..............................................      (9,930,959)
  Net unrealized appreciation..................................................      13,915,884
                                                                                 ----------------
NET ASSETS AT OCTOBER 31, 1993.................................................    $173,755,506
                                                                                 ----------------
Class A:
  Net asset value and redemption price per share ($6,848,531  DIVIDED BY
    646,730 shares of beneficial interest issued and outstanding)..............          $10.59
  Maximum sales charge (4.5% of offering price)................................             .50
                                                                                 ----------------
  Maximum offering price to public.............................................          $11.09
                                                                                 ----------------
                                                                                 ----------------
Class B:
  Net asset value, offering price and redemption price per share ($166,906,975
     DIVIDED BY 15,752,300 shares of beneficial interest issued and
    outstanding)...............................................................          $10.60
                                                                                 ----------------
                                                                                 ----------------
</TABLE>

                                      B-38    See Notes to Financial Statements.
<PAGE>
- ----------------------------------------------
PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
- ----------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         YEAR ENDED
                                                         OCTOBER 31,
NET INVESTMENT INCOME                                       1993
                                                         -----------
<S>                                                      <C>
Income
  Interest and discount earned.........................  $12,311,281
                                                         -----------
Expenses
  Distribution fee--Class A............................        9,508
  Distribution fee--Class B............................    1,621,067
  Management fee.......................................      842,229
  Transfer agent's fees and expenses...................      275,000
  Custodian's fees and expenses........................      110,000
  Trustees' fees.......................................       54,000
  Registration fees....................................       39,000
  Audit fee............................................       30,000
  Legal fees...........................................        5,000
  Miscellaneous........................................       13,064
                                                         -----------
    Total expenses.....................................    2,998,868
                                                         -----------
Net investment income..................................    9,312,413
                                                         -----------
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) ON INVESTMENTS
Net realized gain (loss) on:
  Investment transactions..............................    6,713,276
  Financial futures contracts..........................     (612,137)
                                                         -----------
                                                           6,101,139
                                                         -----------
Net change in unrealized appreciation of investments...    8,892,501
                                                         -----------
Net gain on investments................................   14,993,640
                                                         -----------
NET INCREASE IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM OPERATIONS...  $24,306,053
                                                         -----------
                                                         -----------
</TABLE>

- ---------------------------------------------------
PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
- ----------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31,
INCREASE (DECREASE)                       --------------------------
IN NET ASSETS                                 1993          1992
                                          ------------  ------------
<S>                                       <C>           <C>
Operations
  Net investment income.................  $  9,312,413  $  9,644,784
  Net realized gain on investments......     6,101,139     3,202,179
  Net change in unrealized appreciation
    of investments......................     8,892,501       (23,492)
                                          ------------  ------------
  Net increase in net assets resulting
    from operations.....................    24,306,053    12,823,471
                                          ------------  ------------
Dividends to shareholders from net
  investment income (Note 1)
  Class A...............................      (402,303)     (262,423)
  Class B...............................    (8,910,110)   (9,382,361)
                                          ------------  ------------
                                            (9,312,413)   (9,644,784)
                                          ------------  ------------
Fund share transactions (Note 5)
  Net proceeds from shares subscribed...    83,709,350    69,673,768
  Net asset value of shares issued in
    reinvestment of dividends...........     6,045,712     6,024,862
  Cost of shares reacquired.............   (91,160,162)  (80,074,858)
                                          ------------  ------------
Net decrease in net assets from Fund
  share transactions....................    (1,405,100)   (4,376,228)
                                          ------------  ------------
Total increase (decrease)...............    13,588,540    (1,197,541)

NET ASSETS
Beginning of year.......................   160,166,966   161,364,507
                                          ------------  ------------
End of year.............................  $173,755,506  $160,166,966
                                          ------------  ------------
                                          ------------  ------------
</TABLE>

See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                      B-39
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  Prudential  U.S. Government Fund (the "Fund") was organized as a Massachusetts
business trust on October 2,  1986. Investment operations commenced on  November
7, 1986. The Fund's primary investment objective is to seek a high total return,
capital  appreciation plus high current  income, primarily through investment in
U.S.  Government  securities  and  obligations  issued  or  guaranteed  by  U.S.
Government  agencies  or  instrumentalities.  The  ability  of  issuers  of debt
securities, other than those issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, may be
affected by economic developments in a specific industry or region.

NOTE 1. ACCOUNTING POLICIES
                        The following  is a  summary of  significant  accounting
policies followed by the Fund in the preparation of its financial statements.

SECURITY  VALUATION:  The  Board  of  Trustees  has  authorized  the  use  of an
independent pricing  service to  determine valuations  for normal  institutional
size  trading units of securities. The pricing service considers such factors as
security prices,  yields, maturities,  call features,  ratings and  developments
relating  to specific securities  in arriving at  securities valuations. Options
and financial futures contracts listed on exchanges are valued at their  closing
price  on  the  applicable  exchange. When  market  quotations  are  not readily
available, a security is valued at fair value as determined in good faith by  or
under the direction of the Board of Trustees.

  Short-term  securities which mature in more than 60 days are valued at current
market quotations. Short-term  securities which mature  in 60 days  or less  are
valued at amortized cost which approximates market value.

FINANCIAL  FUTURES CONTRACTS:  A financial futures  contract is  an agreement to
purchase (long) or sell  (short) an agreed  amount of debt  securities at a  set
price  for delivery  on a  future date. Upon  entering into  a financial futures
contract, the Fund is required to pledge to the broker an amount of cash  and/or
other  assets equal to a certain percentage  of the contract amount. This amount
is known  as the  "initial  margin". Subsequent  payments, known  as  "variation
margin",  are made or  received by the  Series each day,  depending on the daily
fluctuations in the value of the  underlying security. Such variation margin  is
recorded for financial statement purposes on a daily basis as unrealized gain or
loss.  The Fund invests in financial futures contracts solely for the purpose of
hedging its  existing portfolio  securities or  securities the  Fund intends  to
purchase  against fluctuations in  value caused by  changes in prevailing market
interest rates.  Should  interest rates  move  unexpectedly, the  Fund  may  not
achieve  the anticipated  benefits of  the financial  futures contracts  and may
realize a loss. The use of  futures transactions involves the risk of  imperfect
correlation  in movements in the price  of futures contracts, interest rates and
the underlying hedged assets.

SECURITIES TRANSACTIONS  AND  INVESTMENT  INCOME:  Securities  transactions  are
recorded on the trade date. Realized gains or losses on sales of investments are
calculated  on the  identified cost  basis. Interest  income is  recorded on the
accrual basis.

  Net investment  income,  other  than distribution  fees,  and  unrealized  and
realized  gains or losses are allocated daily to each class of shares based upon
the relative proportion of net assets of each class at the beginning of the day.

FEDERAL INCOME  TAXES:  It  is  the  Fund's  policy  to  continue  to  meet  the
requirements  of the  Internal Revenue  Code applicable  to regulated investment
companies and to distribute all of  its taxable net income to its  shareholders.
Therefore, no federal income tax provision is required.

DIVIDENDS  AND DISTRIBUTIONS: Dividends  from net investment  income are accrued
daily and payable monthly.  The Fund will distribute  annually any net  realized
capital  gains in  excess of  capital loss  carry-forward if  any. Dividends and
distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

  Income  distributions  and  capital  gains  distributions  are  determined  in
accordance  with income tax regulations which may differ from generally accepted
accounting principles.

RECLASSIFICATION OF CAPITAL ACCOUNTS: Effective November 1, 1992, the Fund began
accounting and reporting  for distributions to  shareholders in accordance  with
Statement  of Position 93-2: Determination,  Disclosure, and Financial Statement
Presentation of Income,  Capital Gain,  and Return of  Capital Distributions  by
Investment  Companies.  The  effect caused  by  adopting this  statement  was to
decrease paid-in-capital and decrease accumulated net realized losses by  $6,842
compared to amounts previously reported through October 31, 1992. Net investment
income, net realized gains, and net assets were not affected by this change.

NOTE 2. AGREEMENTS
                        The  Fund  has  a management  agreement  with Prudential
Mutual Fund  Management,  Inc. ("PMF").  Pursuant  to this  agreement,  PMF  has
responsibility   for  all  investment  advisory   services  and  supervises  the
subadviser's performance of such  services. PMF has  entered into a  subadvisory
agreement  with  The Prudential  Investment  Corporation ("PIC");  PIC furnishes
investment advisory services in connection with the management of the Fund.  PMF
pays  for the cost of the subadviser's services, the compensation of officers of
the Fund, occupancy and certain clerical and bookkeeping costs of the Fund.  The
Fund bears all other costs and expenses.

                                      B-40
<PAGE>
  The management fee paid PMF is computed daily and payable monthly at an annual
rate of .50 of 1% of the Fund's average daily net assets.

  The Fund has distribution agreements with Prudential Mutual Fund Distributors,
Inc.  ("PMFD"), which acts as the distributor of the Class A shares of the Fund,
and Prudential Securities Incorporated ("PSI"), which acts as distributor of the
Class B shares of the Fund  (collectively the "Distributors"). To reimburse  the
Distributors  for their expenses incurred in distributing the Fund's Class A and
B shares, the Fund, pursuant to  plans of distribution, pays the Distributors  a
reimbursement, accrued daily and payable monthly.

  Pursuant   to  the   Class  A   Plan,  the   Fund  reimburses   PMFD  for  its
distribution-related expenses with respect to Class A shares, accrued daily  and
payable  monthly, at an annual rate of up to  .30 of 1% of the average daily net
assets of the Class A shares. Such expenses  under the Class A Plan were .15  of
1%  of the average  daily net assets of  the Class A shares  for the fiscal year
ended October  31, 1993.  PMFD pays  various broker-dealers,  including PSI  and
Pruco  Securities Corporation ("Prusec"), affiliated broker-dealers, for account
servicing fees and other expenses incurred by such broker-dealers.

  Pursuant  to   the  Class   B  Plan,   the  Fund   reimburses  PSI   for   its
distribution-related  expenses with respect to the Class B shares, accrued daily
and paid monthly, at an annual rate of up to 1% of the average daily net  assets
of the Class B shares.

  The  Class B distribution expenses include  commission credits for payments of
commissions and account servicing fees  to financial advisers and an  allocation
for  overhead and other distribution-related  expenses, interest and/or carrying
charges, the cost of  printing and mailing  prospectuses to potential  investors
and of advertising incurred in connection with the distribution of shares.

  The  Distributors recover the distribution  expenses and service fees incurred
through the receipt of reimbursement payments from the Fund under the Plans  and
the  receipt of  initial sales  charges (Class  A only)  and contingent deferred
sales charges (Class B only) from shareholders.

  PMFD has  advised the  Fund that  it has  received approximately  $107,100  in
front-end sales charges resulting from sales of Class A shares during the fiscal
year  ended October 31, 1993.  From these fees, PMFD  paid such sales charges to
dealers which in turn paid commissions to sales persons.

  With respect to the  Class B Plan,  at any given time  the amount of  expenses
incurred  by PSI in distributing the Fund's shares and not recovered through the
imposition of  contingent  deferred sales  charges  in connection  with  certain
redemptions  of  shares may  exceed  the total  reimbursement  made by  the Fund
pursuant to the Class B Plan. For  the year ended October 31, 1993, PSI  advised
the  Fund that it  received approximately $423,200  in contingent deferred sales
charges imposed upon redemptions by shareholders. PSI, as distributor, has  also
advised  the Fund that at October 31,  1993, the amount of distribution expenses
incurred by  PSI  and  not yet  reimbursed  by  the Fund  or  recovered  through
contingent  deferred  sales charges  approximated  $34,800. This  amount  may be
recovered through future payments under the Class B Plan or contingent  deferred
sales charges.

  In  the event of termination or noncontinuation  of the Class B Plan, the Fund
would not  be  contractually obligated  to  pay  PSI, as  distributor,  for  any
expenses  not  previously reimbursed  or  recovered through  contingent deferred
sales charges.

  PMFD is  a wholly-owned  subsidiary of  PMF; PSI,  PMF and  PIC are  indirect,
wholly-owned subsidiaries of The Prudential Insurance Company of America.

NOTE 3. OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES
                        Prudential   Mutual  Fund  Services,  Inc.  ("PMFS"),  a
                        wholly-owned subsidiary  of PMF,  serves as  the  Fund's
transfer agent. During the fiscal year ended October 31, 1993, the Fund incurred
fees of approximately $215,000 for the services of PMFS. As of October 31, 1993,
approximately  $18,000 of such  fees were due  to PMFS. Transfer  agent fees and
expenses in the Statement of  Operations include certain out-of-pocket  expenses
paid to non-affiliates.

NOTE 4. PORTFOLIO SECURITIES
                        Purchases and sales of investment securities, other than
short-term  investments,  for  the  fiscal  year  ended  October  31,  1993 were
$98,802,525 and $101,424,731, respectively.

  The federal income tax basis of the Fund's investments at October 31, 1993 was
$156,715,751 and  accordingly, net  unrealized appreciation  of investments  for
federal  income  tax purposes  was  $13,915,884 (gross  unrealized appreciation-
$14,521,731; gross unrealized depreciation-$605,847).

  For federal income tax purposes, the  Fund has a capital loss carryforward  as
of  October 31, 1993 of approximately  $9,319,000 of which $1,017,000 expires in
1997 and $8,302,000 expires in 1998. Accordingly, no capital gains  distribution
is  expected to be  paid to shareholders  until net gains  have been realized in
excess of such carryforward.

NOTE 5. CAPITAL
                        The Fund offers both Class A and Class B shares. Class A
shares are sold with a front-end sales charge of up to 4.5%. Class B shares  are
sold  with a  contingent deferred  sales charge which  declines from  5% to zero
depending on the  period of time  the shares  are held. Both  classes of  shares

                                      B-41
<PAGE>
have  equal earnings, assets and voting  privileges except that each class bears
different distribution expenses and has exclusive voting rights with respect  to
its distribution plan.

  The  Fund has authorized an unlimited  number of shares of beneficial interest
of each class at $.01 par  value. Transactions in shares of beneficial  interest
for the fiscal years ended October 31, 1993 and 1992 were as follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
CLASS A                                                 SHARES         AMOUNT
- --------------------------------------------------    ----------    ------------
<S>                                                   <C>           <C>
Year ended October 31, 1993:
Shares sold.......................................       750,713    $  7,553,655
Shares issued in reinvestment of dividends........        26,658         272,022
Shares reacquired.................................      (649,104)     (6,560,954)
                                                      ----------    ------------
Net increase in shares outstanding................       128,267    $  1,264,723
                                                      ----------    ------------
                                                      ----------    ------------
Year ended October 31, 1992:
Shares sold.......................................       585,157    $  5,686,194
Shares issued in reinvestment of dividends........        17,268         167,246
Shares reacquired.................................      (355,255)     (3,470,324)
                                                      ----------    ------------
Net increase in shares outstanding................       247,170    $  2,383,116
                                                      ----------    ------------
                                                      ----------    ------------

<CAPTION>

CLASS B                                                 SHARES         AMOUNT
- --------------------------------------------------    ----------    ------------
<S>                                                   <C>           <C>
Year ended October 31, 1993:
Shares sold.......................................     7,467,812    $ 76,155,695
Shares issued in reinvestment of dividends........       565,555       5,773,690
Shares reacquired.................................    (8,280,106)    (84,599,208)
                                                      ----------    ------------
Net decrease in shares outstanding................      (246,739)   $ (2,669,823)
                                                      ----------    ------------
                                                      ----------    ------------
Year ended October 31, 1992:
Shares sold.......................................     6,589,480    $ 63,987,574
Shares issued in reinvestment of dividends........       605,743       5,857,616
Shares reacquired.................................    (7,916,199)    (76,604,534)
                                                      ----------    ------------
Net decrease in shares outstanding................      (720,976)   $ (6,759,344)
                                                      ----------    ------------
                                                      ----------    ------------
</TABLE>

                                      B-42
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRUDENTIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT FUND
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 CLASS A                                         CLASS B
                                -----------------------------------------    ------------------------------------------------
                                                              JANUARY 22,
                                        YEAR ENDED               1990@
                                        OCTOBER 31,             THROUGH                   YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31,
                                ---------------------------   OCTOBER 31,    ------------------------------------------------
                                 1993      1992      1991        1990          1993      1992      1991      1990      1989
                                -------   -------   -------   -----------    --------  --------  --------  --------  --------
<S>                             <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>            <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
 PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value, beginning of
 period.......................  $  9.69   $  9.49   $  8.97     $ 9.31       $   9.70  $   9.50  $   8.97  $   9.54  $   9.05
                                -------   -------   -------   -----------    --------  --------  --------  --------  --------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT
 OPERATIONS
Net investment income.........      .64       .68       .66        .55            .55       .59       .59       .62       .64
Net realized and unrealized
 gain (loss) on investment
 transactions.................      .90       .20       .52       (.34)           .90       .20       .53      (.57)      .52
                                -------   -------   -------   -----------    --------  --------  --------  --------  --------
  Total from investment
    operations................     1.54       .88      1.18        .21           1.45       .79      1.12       .05      1.16
                                -------   -------   -------   -----------    --------  --------  --------  --------  --------
LESS DISTRIBUTIONS
Dividends from net investment
 income.......................     (.64)     (.68)     (.66)      (.55)          (.55)     (.59)     (.59)     (.62)     (.64)
Distributions from
 paid-in-capital..............    --        --        --         --             --        --        --        --         (.03)
                                -------   -------   -------   -----------    --------  --------  --------  --------  --------
  Total distributions.........     (.64)     (.68)     (.66)      (.55)          (.55)     (.59)     (.59)     (.62)     (.67)
                                -------   -------   -------   -----------    --------  --------  --------  --------  --------
Net asset value, end of
 period.......................  $ 10.59   $  9.69   $  9.49     $ 8.97       $  10.60  $   9.70  $   9.50  $   8.97  $   9.54
                                -------   -------   -------   -----------    --------  --------  --------  --------  --------
                                -------   -------   -------   -----------    --------  --------  --------  --------  --------
TOTAL RETURN#.................    16.43%     9.39%    13.72%      2.16%         15.44%     8.46%    12.86%      .64%    13.53%
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of period
 (000)........................  $ 6,849   $ 5,024   $ 2,574     $1,617       $166,907  $155,143  $158,790  $172,521  $169,825
Average net assets (000)......  $ 6,339   $ 3,769   $ 2,158     $  918       $162,107  $154,502  $168,421  $174,276  $156,322
Ratios to average net assets:
  Expenses, including
    distribution fees.........      .96%      .94%     1.24%      1.08%*         1.81%     1.79%     2.09%     1.99%     2.05%
  Expenses, excluding
    distribution fees.........      .81%      .79%     1.09%       .94%*          .81%      .79%     1.09%      .99%     1.06%
  Net investment income.......     6.35%     6.92%     7.24%      7.16%*         5.50%     6.07%     6.39%     6.89%     6.95%
Portfolio turnover............       66%       66%      236%       608%            66%       66%      236%      608%      392%
<FN>
- ---------------
*   Annualized.
@   Commencement of offering of Class A shares.
#   Total  return does not consider the effects  of sales loads. Total return is
    calculated assuming a purchase of shares on the first day and a sale on  the
    last  day of each period reported and includes reinvestment of dividends and
    distributions. Total returns for  periods of less than  a full year are  not
    annualized.
</TABLE>

See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                      B-43
<PAGE>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Shareholders and Trustees
Prudential U.S. Government Fund

    We  have audited  the accompanying  statement of  assets and  liabilities of
Prudential U.S. Government Fund, including  the portfolio of investments, as  of
October  31, 1993, the related statements of  operations for the year then ended
and of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended,
and the financial  highlights for  each of  the five  years in  the period  then
ended.   These   financial   statements  and   financial   highlights   are  the
responsibility of the  Fund's management.  Our responsibility is  to express  an
opinion  on these  financial statements  and financial  highlights based  on our
audits.

    We conducted  our  audits in  accordance  with generally  accepted  auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance  about  whether  the  financial  statements  and  financial
highlights  are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a
test basis, evidence  supporting the  amounts and disclosures  in the  financial
statements.  Our procedures included confirmation of  the securities owned as of
October 31, 1993 by  correspondence with the custodian.  An audit also  includes
assessing  the  accounting principles  used  and significant  estimates  made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement  presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

    In  our opinion, such financial  statements and financial highlights present
fairly, in  all material  respects, the  financial position  of Prudential  U.S.
Government  Fund, as  of October  31, 1993  the results  of its  operations, the
changes in  its net  assets, and  the financial  highlights for  the  respective
stated periods in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.

Deloitte & Touche
New York, New York
December 15, 1993

                                      B-44
<PAGE>
                        DESCRIPTION OF SECURITY RATINGS

MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE

    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  Aaa  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.

    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 thereby  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 the  desirable
investment.  Assurance of interest  and principal payments  or of maintenance of
other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.

    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 represent 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.

COMMERCIAL PAPER

    Moody's commercial paper ratings are opinions  of the ability of issuers  to
repay  punctually  promissory obligations  not  having an  original  maturity in
excess of nine months.

    P-1: The  designation  "Prime-1"  or "P-1"  indicates  the  highest  quality
repayment capacity of the rated issue.

    P-2:  The designation  "Prime-2" or  "P-2" indicates  a strong  capacity for
repayment.

STANDARD & POOR'S CORPORATION

    AAA: Debt  rated AAA  has  the highest  rating assigned  by  S&P to  a  debt
obligation. 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 higher rated issues only in small degree.

    A: Debt rated A has  a strong capacity to  pay interest and repay  principal
although  it is somewhat more  susceptible to the adverse  effects of changes in
circumstances and economic conditions than debt in higher rated categories.

                                      A-1
<PAGE>
    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.

    BB, B, CCC, CC:  Debt rated BB, B,  CCC and CC is  regarded, on balance,  as
predominantly  speculative with  respect to capacity  to pay  interest and repay
principal in  accordance with  the terms  of the  obligation. BB  indicates  the
lowest  degree of  speculation and CC  the highest degree  of speculation. While
such debt will likely  have some quality  and protective characteristics,  these
are  outweighed  by  large  uncertainties of  major  risk  exposures  to adverse
conditions.

COMMERCIAL PAPER

    Standard & Poor's commercial  paper ratings are  current assessments of  the
likelihood of timely payment of debt having an original maturity of no more than
270 days.

    A-1:  The  A-1 designation  indicates that  the  degree of  safety regarding
timely payment is very strong.

    A-2: Capacity  for timely  payment on  issues with  the designation  A-2  is
strong.  However, the relative  degree of safety  is not as  overwhelming as for
issues designated A-1.

                                      A-2


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