File Nos. 33-9634
811-4888
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM N-1A
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 [X]
Pre-Effective Amendment No. [__]
Post-Effective Amendment No. 13 [X]
and/or
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940 [X]
Amendment No. 13 [X]
(Check appropriate box or boxes.)
DREYFUS SHORT-INTERMEDIATE GOVERNMENT FUND
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)
c/o The Dreyfus Corporation
200 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10166
(Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)
Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code: (212) 922-6000
Mark N. Jacobs, Esq.
200 Park Avenue
New York, New York 10166
(Name and Address of Agent for Service)
It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate
box)
immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
----
on (date) pursuant to paragraph (b)
----
60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)
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X on April 1, 1999 pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)
----
75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(ii)
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on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(ii) of Rule 485
----
If appropriate, check the following box:
this post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for
a previously filed post-effective amendment.
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Dreyfus Short-Intermediate Government Fund
Investing in U.S. government securities to maximize current income
PROSPECTUS April 1, 1999
As with all mutual funds, the Securities and Exchange Commission has not
approved or disapproved these securities or passed upon the adequacy of this
prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
<PAGE>
Contents
THE FUND
- ----------------------------------------------------
What every investor 2 Goal/Approach
should know about
the fund 3 Main Risks
4 Past Performance
5 Expenses
6 Management
7 Financial Highlights YOUR INVESTMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
Information 8 Account Policies
for managing your
fund account 11 Distributions and Taxes
12 Services for Fund Investors
14 Instructions for Regular Accounts
16 Instructions for IRAs
FOR MORE INFORMATION
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Where to learn more Back Cover
about this and other
Dreyfus funds
<PAGE>
Dreyfus Short- Intermediate
Government Fund
- --------------------------- The Fund
Ticker Symbol: DSIGX
GOAL/APPROACH
The fund seeks to provide as high a level of current income as is consistent
with the preservation of capital. To pursue this goal, it invests in securities
issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or its agencies, and in repurchase
agreements. The fund may invest up to 35% of net assets in mortgage-related
securities issued by U.S. government agencies, such as mortgage pass-through
securities issued by the Government National Mortgage Association, the Federal
National Mortgage Association, and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
and collateralized mortgage obligations ("CMOs"), including stripped mortgage-
backed securities.
In choosing securities, the portfolio manager first examines U.S. and global
economic conditions and other market factors in order to estimate long- and
short-term interest rates. Using a research-driven investment process, the
portfolio manager then seeks to identify potentially profitable sectors before
they are widely perceived by the market, and seeks underpriced or mispriced
securities that appear likely to perform well over time.
The fund generally maintains an effective duration of approximately three years
or less.
INFORMATION ON THE FUND'S RECENT STRATEGIES AND HOLDINGS CAN BE FOUND IN THE
CURRENT ANNUAL/SEMIANNUAL REPORT (SEE BACK COVER).
Concepts to understand
MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH SECURITIES: pools of residential or commercial mortgages
whose cash flows are "passed through" to the holders of the securities via
monthly payments of interest and principal.
CMOS: multi-class bonds backed by pools of mortgage pass-through securities or
mortgage loans. CMOs may be issued by government agencies or by private
issuers.
STRIPPED MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES: the separate income or principal
components of a mortgage-backed security. CMOs may be partially stripped so that
each investor receives some interest and some principal, or fully stripped into
interest-only and principal-only components.
MAIN RISKS
Prices of bonds tend to move inversely with changes in interest rates. While a
rise in rates may allow the fund to invest for higher yields, the most
immediate effect is usually a drop in bond prices, and therefore in the fund's
share priceas well. To the extent that the fund maintains a higher duration than
short-termfunds, its share price will react more strongly to interest rate
movements. As aresult, the value of your investment in the fund could go up and
down, which means that you could lose money.
Other risk factors could have an effect on the fund's performance:
(pound) if the fund's mortgage-related securities are paid
off substantially earlier or later than expected,
the fund's share price or yields could be hurt
(pound) the value of certain types of stripped mortgage-
backed secur ities may move in the same direction as
interest rates
(pound) because many types of U.S. overnment securities
trade actively among investors outside the U.S.,
their prices may rise and fall as changes in global
economic conditions affect the demand for these
securities
While some of the fund's securities may carry guarantees by the U.S. government
or its agencies, these guarantees do not apply to the market value of those
securities or to shares of the fund itself.
Other potential risks
Most mortgage-backed securities are a form of derivative. Derivatives can be
illiquid and highly sensitive to changes in their under lying securities,
interest rate or index, and can be highly volatile as a result.
At times, the fund may engage in short-term trading. This could increase the
fund's transaction costs and taxable distributions, lowering its a fter-tax
performance accordingly.
The Fund
<PAGE>
PAST PERFORMANCE
The two tables below show the fund's annual returns and its long-term
performance. The first table shows you how the fund's performance has varied
from year to year. The second compares the fund's performance over time to that
of the Merrill Lynch Governments, U.S. Treasury, Short-Term Index, a widely
recognized unmanaged performance benchmark for Treasury securities with
maturities between one and three years. Both tables assume reinvestment of
dividends and distributions. As with all mutual funds, the past is not a
prediction of the future.
- --------------------------------------------------------
Year-by-year total return AS OF 12/31 EACH YEAR (%)
11,29 10.04 13.50 7.02 7.33 12.61 3.96 6.14 6.47
-0.75
89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98
BEST QUARTER: Q2 '89 5.52%
WORST QUARTER: Q1 '92 -1.04%
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Average annual total return AS OF 12/31/98
1 Year 5 Years 10 Years
- -----------------------------------------------------------
FUND 6.47% 5.60% 7.68%
MERRILL LYNCH
GOVERNMENTS,
U.S. TREASURY,
SHORT-TERM INDEX 7.00% 5.98% 7.36%
What this fund is -- and isn't
This fund is a mutual fund: a pooled investment that is professionally managed
and gives you the opportunity to participate in financial markets. It strives
toreach its stated goal, although as with all mutual funds, it cannot offer
guaranteed results.
An investment in this fund is not a bank deposit. It is not insured or
guaranteed by the FDIC or any other government agency. It is not a complete
investment program. You could lose money in this fund, but you also have the
potential to make money.
EXPENSES
As an investor, you pay certain fees and expenses in connection with the fund,
which are described in the table below. Annual fund operating expenses are paid
out of fund assets, so their effect is included in the share price. The fund
hasno sales charge (load) or 12b-1 distribution fees.
--------------------------------------------------------
Fee table
Maximum account fee $12
CHARGED ONLY TO REGULAR ACCOUNTS WITH BALANCES
BELOW $2,000 (SEE "ACCOUNT POLICIES")
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ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES %
OF AVERAGE DAILY NET ASSETS
Management fees 0.50%
Shareholder services fee 0.06%
Other expenses 0.14%
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TOTAL 0.70%
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Expense example
1 Year 3 Years 5 Years 10 Years
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$72 $224 $390 $871
This example shows what you could pay in expenses over time. It uses the same
hypothetical conditions other funds use in their prospectuses: $10,000 initial
investment, 5% total return each year and no changes in expenses. The figures
shown would be the same whether you sold your shares at the end of a period or
kept them. Because actual return and expenses will be different, the example is
for comparison only.
Concepts to understand
MANAGEMENT FEE: the fee paid to the investment adviser for managing the fund's
portfolio and assisting in all aspects of the fund's operations.
SHAREHOLDER SERVICES FEE: a fee of up to 0.25% used to reimburse Dreyfus
ServiceCorporation for shareholder account service and maintenance.
OTHER EXPENSES: fees paid by the fund for miscellaneous items such as transfer
agency, custody, professional and registration fees.
The Fund
<PAGE>
MANAGEMENT
The investment adviser for the fund is The Dreyfus Corporation, 200 Park
Avenue,New York, New York 10166. Founded in 1947, Dreyfus manages one of the
nation's leading mutual fund complexes, with more than $117 billion in more
than 160 mutual fund portfolios. Dreyfus is the mutual fund business of Mellon
Bank Corporation, a broad-based financial services company with a bank at its
core. With more than $350 billion of assets under management and $1.7 trillion
of assets under administration and custody, Mellon provides a full range of
banking, investment and trust products and services to individuals, businesses
and institutions. Its mutual fund companies place Mellon as the leading bank
manager of mutual funds. Mellon is headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
The Dreyfus asset management philosophy is based on the belief that discipline
and consistency are important to investment success. For each fund, the firm
seeks to establish clear guidelines for portfolio management and to be
systematic in making decisions. This approach is designed to provide each fund
with a distinct, stable identity, and offers the potential for measuring
performance and volatility in consistent ways.
Gerald Thunelius is the fund's primary portfolio manager, a position he has
heldsince June 1994. Mr. Thunelius joined Dreyfus in May 1989.
Concepts to understand
YEAR 2000 ISSUES: the fund could be adversely affected if the computer systems
used by Dreyfus and the fund's other service providers do not properly process
and calculate date-related information from and after January 1, 2000.
Dreyfus is working to avoid year 2000-related problems in its systems and to
obtain assurances from other service providers that they are taking similar
steps. In addition, issuers of securities in which the fund invests may be
adversely affected by year 2000-related problems. This could have an impact on
the value of the fund's investments and its share price.
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
This table describes the fund's performance for the fiscal periods indicated.
"Total return" shows how much your investment in the fund would have increased
(or decreased) during each period, assuming you had reinvested all dividends
and distributions. These figures have been independently audited by Ernst &
Young LLP, whose report, along with the fund's financial statements, is
included in the annual report.
<TABLE>
YEAR ENDED NOVEMBER 30,
1998 1997 1996 1995 1994
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PER-SHARE DATA ($)
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
Net asset value, beginning of period 10.82 10.95 11.06 10.57 11.45
Investment operations:
Investment income -- net .74 .66 .65 .73 .76
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)
on investments .01 (.13) (.11) .49 (.82)
Total from investment operations .75 .53 .54 1.22 (.06)
Distributions:
Dividends from investment income -- net (.75) (.66) (.65) (.73) (.76)
Dividends from net realized gain
on investments -- -- -- -- (.06)
Total distributions (.75) (.66) (.65) (.73) (.82)
Net asset value, end of period 10.82 10.82 10.95 11.06 10.57
Total return (%) 7.21 4.93 5.08 11.91 (.57)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Ratio of expenses to
average net assets (%) .70 .74 .74 .66 .47
Ratio of net investment income to
average net assets (%) 6.85 6.13 5.99 6.73 6.91
Decrease reflected in above expense ratios
due to actions by Dreyfus (%) -- .01 -- .09 .30
Portfolio turnover rate (%) 902.14 818.39 594.44 387.60 695.60
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net assets, end of period ($ x 1,000) 487,714 488,172 569,319 573,681 496,513
The Fund
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
Your Investment
ACCOUNT POLICIES
Buying shares
YOU PAY NO SALES CHARGES to invest in this fund. Your price for fund shares is
the fund's net asset value per share (NAV), which is generally calculated as of
the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (usually 4:00 p.m. Eastern
time) every day the exchange is open. Your order will be priced at the next NAV
calculated after your order is accepted by the fund's transfer agent or other
entity authorized to accept orders on behalf of the fund. The fund's
investmentsare generally valued by an independent pricing service approved and
supervised by the fund's board.
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Minimum investments
Initial Additional
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REGULAR ACCOUNTS $2,500 $100
$500 FOR
TELE TRANSFER INVESTMENTS
TRADITIONAL IRAS $750 NO MINIMUM
SPOUSAL IRAS $750 NO MINIMUM
ROTH IRAS $750 NO MINIMUM
EDUCATION IRAS $500 NO MINIMUM
AFTER THE FIRST YEAR
DREYFUS AUTOMATIC $100 $100
INVESTMENT PLANS
All investments must be in U.S. dollars. Third-party checks cannot be accepted.
You may be charged a fee for any check that does not clear. Maximum TeleTransfer
purchas e is $150,000 per day.
Third-party investments
If you invest through a third party (rather than directly with Dreyfus), the
policies and fees may be different than those described here. Banks, brokers,
401(k) plans, financial advisers and financial supermarkets may charge
transaction fees and may set different minimum investments or limitations on
buying or selling shares. Consult a representative of your plan or financial
institution if in doubt.
Selling shares
YOU MAY SELL SHARES AT ANY TIME. Your shares will be sold at the next NAV
calculated after your order is accepted by the fund's transfer agent or other
entity authorized to accept orders on behalf of the fund. Any certificates
representing fund shares being sold must be returned with your redemption
request. Your order will be processed promptly and you will generally receive
the proceeds within a week.
BEFORE SELLING OR WRITING A CHECK for recently purchased shares, please note
that if the fund has not yet collected payment for the shares you are selling,
it may delay sending the proceeds for up to eight business days or until it has
collected payment.
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Limitations on selling shares by phone
Proceeds sent by Minimum Maximum
- --------------------------------------------------------
CHECK NO MINIMUM $150,000 PER DAY
WIRE $1,000 $250,000 FOR JOINT ACCOUNTS
EVERY 30 DAYS
TELETRANSFER $500 $250,000 FOR JOINT ACCOUNTS
EVERY 30 DAYS
Written sell orders
Some circumstances require written sell orders along with signature guarantees.
These include:
(pound) amounts of $1,000 or more on accounts whose address has
been changed within the last 30 days
(pound) requests to send the proceeds to a different payee or
address Written sell orders of $100,000 or more must also
be signature guaranteed.
A SIGNATURE GUARANTEE helps protect against fraud. You can obtain one from most
banks or securities dealers, but not from a notary public. For joint accounts,
each signature must be guaranteed. Please call us to ensure that your signature
guarantee will be processed correctly.
Your Investment
<PAGE>
ACCOUNT POLICIES (CONTINUED)
General policies
UNLESS YOU DECLINE TELEPHONE PRIVILEGES on your application, you may be
responsible for any fraudulent telephone order as long as Dreyfus takes
reasonable measures to verify the order.
THE FUND RESERVES THE RIGHT TO:
(pound) refuse any purchase or exchange request that
could adversely a ffect the fund or its operations,
including those from any individual or group who, in
the fund's view, is likely to engage in excessive
trading (usually defined as more than four exchanges
out of the fund within a calendar year)
(pound) refuse any purchase or exchange request in excess of1%
of the fund's total assets
(pound) change or discontinue its exchange privilege, or
temporarily suspend this privilege during unusual
market conditions (pound) change its minimum investment
amounts
(pound) delay sending out redemption proceeds for up to seven
days (generally applies only in cases of very large
redemptions, excessivetrading or during unusual market
conditions) The fund also reserves the right to make a
"redemption in kind" -- payment in portfolio securities
rather than cash -- if the amount you are redeeming is
large enough to affect fund operations (for example, if
it represents more than 1% of the fund's assets).
Small account policies
To offset the relatively higher costs of servicing smaller accounts, the fund
charges regular accounts with balances below $2,000 an annual fee of $12. The
fee will be imposed during the fourth quarter of each calendar year.
The fee will be waived for: any investor whose aggregate Dreyfus mutual fund
investments total at least $25,000; IRA accounts; accounts participating in
automatic investment programs; and accounts opened through a financial
institution.
If your account falls below $500, the fund may ask you to increase your
balance. If it is still below $500 after 30 days, the fund may close your
account and send you the proceeds.
DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
THE FUND USUALLY PAYS ITS SHAREHOLDERS dividends from its net investment income
once a month, and distributes any net capital gains that it has realized once a
year. Your distributions will be reinvested in the fund unless you instruct the
fund otherwise. There are no fees or sales charges on reinvestments.
FUND DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS ARE TAXABLE to most investors (unless your
investment is in an IRA or other tax-advantaged account). The tax status of a
ny distribution is the same regardless of how long you have been in the fund and
whether you reinvest your distributions or take them in cash. In general,
distributions are taxable as follows:
- --------------------------------------------------------
Taxability of distributions
Type of Tax rate for Tax rate for
distribution 15% bracket 28% bracket or above
- --------------------------------------------------------
INCOME ORDINARY ORDINARY
DIVIDENDS INCOME RATE INCOME RATE
SHORT-TERM ORDINARY ORDINARY
CAPITAL GAINS INCOME RATE INCOME RATE
LONG-TERM
CAPITAL GAINS 10% 20%
The tax status of your dividends and distributions will be detailed in your
annual tax statement from the fund.
Because everyone's tax situation is unique, always consult your tax
professionalabout federal, state and local tax consequences.
Taxes on transactions
Except in tax-advantaged accounts, any sale or exchange of fund shares,
including through the checkwriting privilege, may generate a tax liability.
The table at right also can provide a guide for your potential tax liability
when selling or exchanging fund shares. "Short-term capital gains" applies to
fund shares sold up to 12 months after buying them. "Long-term capital gains"
applies to shares sold after 12 months.
Your Investment
<PAGE>
SERVICES FOR FUND INVESTORS
Automatic services
BUYING OR SELLING SHARES AUTOMATICALLY is easy with the services described
below. With each service, you select a schedule and amount, subject to certain
restrictions. You can set up most of these services with your application or by
calling 1-800-645-6561.
- --------------------------------------------------------
For investing
DREYFUS AUTOMATIC For making automatic investments
ASSET BUILDER((reg.tm)) from a designated bank account.
DREYFUS PAYROLL For making automatic investments
SAVINGS PLAN through a payroll deduction.
DREYFUS GOVERNMENT For making automatic investments
DIRECT DEPOSIT from your federal employment,
PRIVILEGE Social Security or other regular
federal government check.
DREYFUS DIVIDEND For automatically reinvesting the
SWEEP dividends and distributions from
one Dreyfus fund into another
(not available for IRAs).
- --------------------------------------------------------
For exchanging shares
DREYFUS AUTO- For making regular exchanges
EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE from one Dreyfus fund into
another.
- --------------------------------------------------------
For selling shares
DREYFUS AUTOMATIC For making regular withdrawals
WITHDRAWAL PLAN from most Dreyfus funds.
Dreyfus Financial Centers
Through a nationwide network of Dreyfus Financial Centers, Dreyfus offers a
full array of investment services and products. This includes information on
mutual funds, brokerage services, tax-advantaged products and retirement
planning. Our experienced financial consultants can help you make informed
choices and provide you with personalized attention in handling account
transactions. The Financial Centers also offer informative seminars and events.
To find the Financial Center nearest you, call 1-800-499-3327.
Checkwriting privilege
YOU MAY WRITE REDEMPTION CHECKS against your account in amounts of $500 or
more. These checks are free; however, a fee will be charged if you request a
stop payment or if the transfer agent cannot honor a redemption check due to
insufficient funds or another valid reason. Please do not postdate your checks
or use them to close your account.
Exchange privilege
YOU CAN EXCHANGE $500 OR MORE from one Dreyfus fund into another (no minimum
forretirement accounts). You can request your exchange in writing or by phone.
Be sure t o read the current prospectus for any fund into which you are
exchanging. Any new account established through an exchange will have the same
privileges asyour original account (as long as they are available). There is
currently no feefor exchanges, although you may be charged a sales load when
exchanging into anyfund that has one.
Dreyfus TeleTransfer privilege
TO MOVE MONEY BETWEEN YOUR BANK ACCOUNT and your Dreyfus fund account with a
phone call, use the Dreyfus TeleTransfer privilege. You can set up TeleTransfer
on your account by providing bank account information and following the
instructions on your application.
The Dreyfus Touch((reg.tm))
FOR 24-HOUR AUTOMATED ACCOUNT ACCESS, use Dreyfus Touch. With a touch-tone
phone, you can easily manage your Dreyfus accounts, obtain information on other
Dreyfus mutual funds and get current stock market quotes.
Retirement plans
Dreyfus offers a variety of retirement plans, including traditional, Roth and
Education IRAs. Here's where you call for information: (pound) for traditional,
rollover, Roth and Education IRAs, call 1-800-645-656(pound) for SEP-IRAs,
Keogh accounts, 401(k) and 403(b) accounts, call 1-800-358-0910
<PAGE>
INSTRUCTIONS FOR REGULAR ACCOUNTS
TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT
In Writing
Complete the application.
Mail your application and a check to:
The Dreyfus Family of Funds
P.O. Box 9387, Providence, RI 02940-9387
TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT
Fill out an investment slip, and write your
account number on your check.
Mail the slip and the check to:
The Dreyfus Family of Funds
P.O. Box 105, Newark, NJ 07101-0105
By Telephone
WIRE Have your bank send your
investment to The Bank of New York,
with these instructions:
* ABA# 021000018
* DDA# 8900052139
* the fund name
* your Social Security or tax ID number
* name(s) of investor(s)
Call us to obtain an account number.
Return your application.
WIRE Have your bank send your
investment to The Bank of New York,
with these instructions:
* ABA# 021000018
* DDA# 8900052139
* the fund name
* your account number
* name(s) of investor(s)
ELECTRONIC CHECK Same as wire, but insert
"1111" before your account number.
TELETRANSFER Request TeleTransfer on your
application. Call us to request your transaction.
Automatically
WITH AN INITIAL INVESTMENT Indicate on
your application which automatic
service(s) you want. Return your
application with your investment.
WITHOUT ANY INITIAL INVESTMENT Check
the Dreyfus Step Program option on your
application. Return your application, then
complete the additional materials when
they are sent to you.
ALL SERVICES Call us to request a form to add any automatic investing service
(see "Services for Fund Investors"). Complete and return the forms along with
any other required materials.
Via the Internet
COMPUTER Visit the Dreyfus Web site
http://www.dreyfus.com and follow
the instructions to download an account
application.
TO SELL SHARES
Write a redemption check OR letter of instruction that includes:
* your name(s) and signature(s)
* your account number
* the fund name
* the dollar amount you want to sell
* how and where to send the proceeds
Obtain a signature guarantee or other documentation, if required (see "Account
Policies -- Selling Shares").
Mail your request to:
The Dreyfus Family of Funds
P.O. Box 9671, Providence, RI02940-9671
WIRE Be sure the fund has your bank account information on file. Call us to
request your transaction. Proceeds will be wired to your bank.
TELETRANSFER Be sure the fund has your bank account information on file. Call
us to request your transaction. Proceeds will be sent to your bank by electronic
check.
CHECK Call us to request your transaction. A check will be sent to the address
of record.
DREYFUS AUTOMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN Call us to request a form to add the plan.
Complete the form, specifying the amount and frequency of withdrawals you would
like.
Be sure to maintain an account balance of $5,000 or more.
To reach Dreyfus, call
toll free in the U.S.
1-800-645-6561
Outside the U.S. 516-794-5452
Make checks payable to:
THE DREYFUS FAMILY OF FUNDS
You also can deliver requests to any Dreyfus Financial Center. Because
processing time may vary, please ask the representative when your account will
be credited or debited.
Concepts to understand
WIRE TRANSFER: for transferring mon ey from one financial institution to
another.Wiring is the fastest way to move money, although your bank may charge a
fee to send or receive wire transfers. Wire redemptions from the fund are
subject to a $1,000 minimum.
ELECTRONIC CHECK: for transferring money out of a bank account. Your
transactionis entered electronically, but may take up to eight business days to
clear. Electronic checks usually are available without a fee at
all Automated Clearing House (ACH) banks.
Your Investment
<PAGE>
INSTRUCTIONS FOR IRAS
TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT
In Writing
Complete an IRA application, making sure to specify the fund name and to
indicate the year the contribution is for.
Mail your application and a check to:
The Dreyfus Trust Company,
Custodian P.O. Box 6427,
Providence, RI 02940-6427
TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT
Fill out an investment slip, and write your account number on your check.
Indicate the year the contribution is for.
Mail in the slip an d the check (see "To Open an Account" at left).
By Telephone
WIRE Have your bank send your
investment to The Bank of New York,
with these instructions:
* ABA# 021000018
* DDA# 8900052139
* the fund name
* your account number
* name of investor
* the contribution year
ELECTRONIC CHECK Same as wire, but insert "1111" before your account number.
TELEPHONE CONTRIBUTION Call to request us to move money from a regular Dreyfus
account to an IRA (both accounts must be held in the same shareholder name).
Automatically
WITHOUT ANY INITIAL INVESTMENT Call us to request a Dreyfus Step Program form.
Complete and return the form along with your application.
ALL SERVICES Call us to request a form to add an automatic investing service
(see "Services for Fund Investors"). Complete and return the form along with
anyother required materials.
All contributions will count as current year.
Via the Internet
COMPUTER Visit the Dreyfus Web site
http://www.dreyfus.com and follow
the instructions to download an account application.
TO SELL SHARES
Write a redemption check* OR write a letter of instruction that includes:
* your name and signature
* your account number and fund name
* the dollar amount you want to sell
* how and where to send the proceeds
* whether the distribution is qualified or premature
* whether the 10% TEFRA should be withheld
Obtain a signature guarantee or other documentation, if required. Mail in your
request (see "To Open an Account" at left).
*A redemption check written for a qualified distribution is not subject to
TEFRA.
DREYFUS AUTOMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN Call us to request instructions to establish
the plan.
To reach Dreyfus, call
toll free in the U.S.
1-800-645-6561
Outside the U.S. 516-794-5452
Make checks payable to:
THE DREYFUS TRUST CO.,
CUSTODIAN
You also can deliver requests to any Dreyfus Financial Center. Because
processing time may vary, please ask the representative when your account will
be credited or debited. Concepts to understand WIRE TRANSFER: for transferring
money from one financial institution to another.Wiring is the fastest way to
move money, although your bank may charge a fee to send or receive wire
transfers. Wire redemptions from the fund are subject to a $1,000 minimum.
ELECTRONIC CHECK: for transferring money out of a bank account. Your
transaction is entered electronically, but may take up to eight business days to
clear. Electronic checks usually are available without a fee at all Automated
Clearing House (ACH) banks.
Your Investment
<PAGE>
For More Information
Dreyfus Short-Intermediate
Government Fund
- ------------------------------
SEC file number: 811-4888
More information on this fund is available free upon request, including the
following:
Annual/Semiannual Report
Describes the fund's performance, lists portfolio
holdings and contains a letter from the fund's manager
discussing recent market conditions, economic trends and
fund strategies that significantly affected the fund's
performance during the last fiscal year.
Statement of Additional Information (SAI)
Provides more details about the fund and its policies. A
current SAI is on file with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) and is incorporated by reference (is
legally considered part of this prospectus).
To obtain information:
BY TELEPHONE
Call 1-800-645-6561
BY MAIL Write to:
The Dreyfus Family of Funds
144 Glenn Curtiss Boulevard
Uniondale, NY 11556-0144
BY E-MAIL Send your request to
[email protected]
ON THE INTERNET Text-only
versions of fund documents
can be viewed online or
downloaded from:
SEC
http://www.sec.gov
DREYFUS
http://www.dreyfus.com
You can also obtain copies by visiting the SEC's Public Reference Room in
Washington , DC (phone 1-800-SEC-0330) or by sending your request and a
duplicating fee to the SEC's Public Reference Section, Washington, DC
20549-6009.
(c) 1999, Dreyfus Service Corporation 542P0499
<PAGE>
_________________________________________________________________________ __
DREYFUS SHORT-INTERMEDIATE GOVERNMENT FUND
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
APRIL 1, 1999
____________________________________________________________________________
This Statement of Additional Information, which is not a prospectus,
supplements and should be read in conjunction with the current Prospectus of
Dreyfus Short-Intermediate Government Fund (the "Fund"), dated April 1,
1999, as it may be revised from time to time. To obtain a copy of the
Fund's Prospectus, please write to the Fund at 144 Glenn Curtiss Boulevard,
Uniondale, New York, 11556-0144, or call one of the following numbers:
Call Toll Free 1-800-645-6561
In New York City - Call 1-718-895-1206
Outside the U.S. - Call 516-794-5452
The Fund's most recent Annual Report and Semi-Annual Report to
Shareholders are separate documents supplied with this Statement of
Additional Information, and the financial statements, accompanying notes and
report of independent auditors appearing in the Annual Report are
incorporated by reference into this Statement of Additional Information.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
Description of the Fund...................................... B-2
Management of the Fund....................................... B-10
Management Arrangements...................................... B-14
How to Buy Shares............................................ B-17
Shareholder Services Plan.................................... B-19
How to Redeem Shares......................................... B-20
Shareholder Services......................................... B-22
Determination of Net Asset Value............................. B-26
Dividends, Distributions and Taxes........................... B-26
Portfolio Transactions....................................... B-28
Performance Information...................................... B-28
Information About the Fund................................... B-29
Counsel and Independent Auditors............................. B-31
DESCRIPTION OF THE FUND
The Fund is a Massachusetts business trust that commenced operations on
April 6, 1987. The Fund is an open-end management investment company, known
as a mutual fund. The Fund is a diversified fund, which means that, with
respect to 75% of its total assets, the Fund will not invest more than 5% of
its assets in the securities of any single issuer.
The Dreyfus Corporation (the "Manager") serves as the Fund's investment
adviser.
Premier Mutual Fund Services, Inc. (the "Distributor") is the
distributor of the Fund's shares.
Certain Portfolio Securities
The following information supplements and should be read in conjunction
with the Fund's Prospectus.
U.S. Government Securities. Securities issued or guaranteed by the
U.S. Government or its agencies or instrumentalities include U.S. Treasury
securities, which differ in their interest rates, maturities and times of
issuance. Some obligations issued or guaranteed by U.S. Government agencies
and instrumentalities are supported by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
Treasury; others by the right of the issuer to borrow from the Treasury;
others by discretionary authority of the U.S. Government to purchase certain
obligations of the agency or instrumentality; and others only by the credit
of the agency or instrumentality. These securities bear fixed, floating or
variable rates of interest. While the U.S. Government currently provides
financial support to such U.S. Government-sponsored agencies or
instrumentalities, no assurance can be given that it will always do so,
since it is not so obligated by law.
U.S. Treasury securities include Treasury Inflation-Protection
Securities ("TIPS"), which are newly created securities issued by the U.S.
Treasury designed to provide investors a long term investment vehicle that
is not vulnerable to inflation. The interest rate paid by TIPS is fixed,
while the principal value rises or falls semi-annually based on changes in a
published Consumer Price Index. Thus, if inflation occurs, the principal
and interest payments on the TIPS are adjusted accordingly to protect
investors from inflationary loss. During a deflationary period, the
principal and interest payments decrease, although the TIPS' principal will
not drop below its face amount at maturity.
In exchange for the inflation protection, TIPS generally pay lower
interest rates than typical Treasury securities. Only if inflation occurs
will TIPS offer a higher real yield than a conventional Treasury bond of the
same maturity. In addition, it is not possible to predict with assurance
how the market for TIPS will develop; initially, the secondary market for
these securities may not be as active or liquid as the secondary market for
conventional Treasury securities. Principal appreciation and interest
payments on TIPS will be taxed annually as ordinary interest income for
Federal income tax calculations. As a result, any appreciation in principal
must be counted as interest income in the year the increase occurs, even
though the investor will not receive such amounts until the TIPS are sold or
mature. Principal appreciation and interest payments will be exempt from
state and local income taxes.
Mortgage-Related Securities. The Fund may invest up to 35% of its net
assets in mortgage-related securities issued or guaranteed by U.S.
Government agencies or instrumentalities, including those with fixed,
floating or variable interest rates, those with interest rates that change
based on multiples of changes in a specified index of interest rates and
those with interest rates that change inversely to changes in interest
rates, as well as stripped mortgage-backed securities which do not bear
interest. Mortgage-related securities are a form of derivative
collateralized by pools of commercial or residential mortgages. Pools of
mortgage loans are assembled as securities for sale to investors by various
governmental, government-related and private organizations. These
securities may include complex instruments such as collateralized mortgage
obligations, stripped mortgage-backed securities, mortgage pass-through
securities, interests in real estate mortgage investment conduits
("REMICs"), and adjustable rate mortgages.
Residential Mortgage-Related Securities--The Fund may invest in mortgage-
related securities representing participation interests in pools of one- to
four-family residential mortgage loans issued or guaranteed by governmental
agencies or instrumentalities, such as the Government National Mortgage
Association ("GNMA"), the Federal National Mortgage Association ("FNMA"),
and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("FHLMC"), or issued by
private entities. Similar to commercial mortgage-related securities,
residential mortgage-related securities have been issued using a variety of
structures, including multi-class structures featuring senior and
subordinated classes.
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations and Multi-Class Pass-Through Securities-
- -Collateralized mortgage obligations or "CMOs" are multiclass bonds backed
by pools of mortgage pass-through certificates or mortgage loans. CMOs in
which the Fund may invest may be collateralized by (a) pass-through
certificates issued or guaranteed by GNMA, FNMA or FHLMC, (b) unsecuritized
mortgage loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed
by the Department of Veterans' Affairs or (c) any combination thereof.
Each class of CMOs, often referred to as a "tranche," is issued at a
specific coupon rate and has a stated maturity or final distribution date.
Principal prepayments on collateral underlying a CMO may cause it to be
retired substantially earlier than the stated maturities or final
distribution dates. The principal and interest on the underlying mortgages
may be allocated among the several classes of a series of a CMO in many
ways. One or more tranches of a CMO may have coupon rates which reset
periodically at a specified increment over an index, such as the London
Interbank Offered Rate ("LIBOR") (or sometimes more than one index). These
floating rate CMOs typically are issued with lifetime caps on the coupon
rate thereon. The Fund also may invest in inverse floating rate CMOs.
Inverse floating rate CMOs constitute a tranche of a CMO with a coupon rate
that moves in the reverse direction to an applicable index such as the
LIBOR. Accordingly, the coupon rate thereon will increase as interest rates
decrease. Inverse floating rate CMOs are typically more volatile than fixed
or floating rate tranches of CMOs.
Many inverse floating rate CMOs have coupons that move inversely to a
multiple of an applicable index such as LIBOR. The effect of the coupon
varying inversely to a multiple of an applicable index creates a leverage
factor. The markets for inverse floating rate CMOs with highly leveraged
characteristics may at times by very thin. The Fund's ability to dispose of
its positions in such securities will depend on the degree of liquidity in
the markets for such securities. It is impossible to predict the amount of
trading interest that may exist in such securities, and therefore the future
degree of liquidity. It should be noted that inverse floaters based on
multiples of a stated index are designed to be highly sensitive to changes
in interest rates and can subject the holders thereof to extreme reductions
of yield and loss of principal.
As CMOs have evolved, some classes of CMO bonds have become more
prevalent. The planned amortization class (PAC) and targeted amortization
class (TAC), for example, were designed to reduce prepayment risk by
establishing a sinking-fund structure. PAC and TAC bonds assure to varying
degrees that investors will receive payments over a predetermined period
under varying prepayment scenarios. Although PAC and TAC bonds are similar,
PAC bond are better able to provide stable cash flows under various
prepayment scenarios than TAC bonds because of the order in which these
tranches are paid.
Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities--The Fund also may invest in stripped
mortgage-backed securities which are created by segregating the cash flows
from underlying mortgage loans or mortgage securities to create two or more
new securities, each with a specified percentage of the underlying
security's principal or interest payments. Mortgage securities may be
partially stripped so that each investor class receives some interest and
some principal. When securities are completely stripped, however, all of
the interest is distributed to holders of one type of security, known as an
interest-only security, or IO, and all of the principal is distributed to
holders of another type of security known as a principal-only security, or
PO. Strips can be created in a pass-through structure or as tranches of a
CMO. The yields to maturity on IOs and POs are very sensitive to the rate
of principal payments (including prepayments) on the related underlying
mortgage assets. If the underlying mortgage assets experience greater than
anticipated prepayments of principal, the Fund may not fully recoup its
initial investment in IOs. Conversely, if the underlying mortgage assets
experience less than anticipated prepayments of principal, the yield on POs
could be materially and adversely affected.
Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Loans ("ARMs")--ARMs eligible for inclusion in a
mortgage pool will generally provide for a fixed initial mortgage interest
rate for a specified period of time, generally 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 in an index. ARMs typically have minimum and maximum rates beyond
which the mortgage interest rate may not vary over the lifetime of the
loans. Certain ARMs provide for additional limitations on the maximum
amount by which the mortgage interest rate may adjust for any single
adjustment period. Limitations on monthly payments can result in monthly
payments that are greater or less than the amount necessary to amortize a
negatively amortizing ARM by its maturity at the interest rate in effect
during any particular month.
Repurchase Agreements. The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements.
In a repurchase agreement, the Fund buys, and the seller agrees to
repurchase, a security at a mutually agreed upon time and price (usually
within seven days). The repurchase agreement thereby determines the yield
during the purchaser's holding period, while the seller's obligation to
repurchase is secured by the value of the underlying security. The Fund's
custodian or sub-custodian will have custody of, and will hold in a
segregated account, securities acquired by the Fund under a repurchase
agreement. Repurchase agreements are considered by the staff of the
Securities and Exchange Commission to be loans by the Fund. In an attempt
to reduce the risk of incurring a loss on a repurchase agreement, the Fund
will enter into repurchase agreements only with domestic banks with total
assets in excess of $1 billion, or primary government securities dealers
reporting to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, with respect to
securities of the type in which the Fund may invest or government securities
regardless of their remaining maturities, and will require that additional
securities be deposited with it if the value of the securities purchased
should decrease below resale price. Repurchase agreements could involve
risks in the event of a default or insolvency of the other party to the
agreement, including possible delays or restrictions upon the Fund's ability
to dispose of the underlying securities. The Fund may enter into repurchase
agreements with certain banks or non-bank dealers.
Illiquid Securities. The Fund may invest up to 15% of the value of its
net assets in securities as to which a liquid trading market does not exist,
provided such investments are consistent with the Fund's investment
objective. These securities may include securities that are not readily
marketable, such as certain securities that are subject to legal or
contractual restrictions on resale and repurchase agreements providing for
settlement in more than seven days after notice. As to these securities,
the Fund is subject to a risk that should the Fund desire to sell them when
a ready buyer is not available at a price that the Fund deems representative
of their value, the value of the Fund's net assets could be adversely
affected.
Investment Techniques
The following information supplements and should be read in conjunction
with the Fund's Prospectus.
Lending Portfolio Securities. The Fund may lend securities from its
portfolio to brokers, dealers and other financial institutions needing to
borrow securities to complete certain transactions. The Fund continues to
be entitled to payments in amounts equal to the interest or other
distributions payable on the loaned securities which affords the Fund an
opportunity to earn interest on the amount of the loan and on the loaned
securities' collateral. Loans of portfolio securities may not exceed 33-
1/3% of the value of the Fund's total assets, and the Fund will receive
collateral consisting of cash, U.S. Government securities or irrevocable
letters of credit which will be maintained at all times in an amount equal
to at least 100% of the current market value of the loaned securities. Such
loans are terminable by the Fund at any time upon specified notice. The
Fund might experience risk of loss if the institution with which it has
engaged in a portfolio loan transaction breaches its agreement with the
Fund. In connection with its securities lending transactions, the Fund may
return to the borrower or a third party which is unaffiliated with the Fund,
and which is acting as a "placing broker," a part of the interest earned
from the investment of collateral received for securities loaned.
Borrowing Money. The Fund is permitted to borrow to the extent
permitted under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940
Act"), which permits an investment company to borrow in an amount up to 33-
1/3% of the value of its total assets. The Fund currently intends to borrow
money only for temporary or emergency (not leveraging) purposes, in an
amount up to 15% of the value of its total assets (including the amount
borrowed) valued at the lesser of cost or market, less liabilities (not
including the amount borrowed) at the time the borrowing is made. While
borrowings exceed 5% of the Fund's total assets, the Fund will not make any
additional investments.
Short-Selling. In these transactions, the Fund sells a security it
does not own in anticipation of a decline in the market value of the
security. To complete the transaction, the Fund must borrow the security to
make delivery to the buyer. The Fund is obligated to replace the security
borrowed by purchasing it subsequently at the market price at the time of
replacement. The price at such time may be more or less than the price at
which the security was sold by the Fund, which would result in a loss or
gain, respectively.
Securities will not be sold short if, after effect is given to any such
short sale, the total market value of all securities sold short would exceed
25% of the value of the Fund's net assets. The Fund may not make a short
sale which results in the Fund having sold short in the aggregate more than
5% of the outstanding securities of any class of an issuer.
The Fund also may make short sales "against the box," in which the Fund
enters into a short sale of a security it owns. At no time will more than
15% of the value of the Fund's net assets be in deposits on short sales
against the box.
Until the Fund closes its short position or replaces the borrowed
security, the Fund will: (a) maintain a segregated account, containing
permissible liquid assets, at such a level that the amount deposited in the
account plus the amount deposited with the broker as collateral always
equals the current value of the security sold short; or (b) otherwise cover
its short position.
Forward Commitments. The Fund may purchase or sell securities on a
forward commitment, when issued or delayed delivery basis, which means that
delivery and payment take place a number of days after the date of the
commitment to purchase or sell the securities at a predetermined price
and/or yield. Typically, no interest accrues to the purchaser until the
security is delivered. When purchasing a security on a forward commitment
basis, the Fund assumes the rights and risks of ownership of the security,
including the risk of price and yield fluctuations, and takes such
fluctuations into account when determining its net asset value. Because the
Fund is not required to pay for these securities until the delivery date,
these risks are in addition to the risks associated with the Fund's other
investments. If the Fund is fully or almost fully invested when forward
commitment purchases are outstanding, such purchases may result in a form of
leverage. The Fund intends to engage in forward commitments to increase its
portfolio's financial exposure to the types of securities in which it
invests. Leveraging the portfolio in this manner will increase the Fund's
exposure to changes in interest rates and will increase the volatility of
its returns. The Fund will maintain a segregated account consisting of
permissible liquid assets at least equal at all times to the amount of the
Fund's purchase commitments. At no time will the Fund have more than 33-
1/3% of its assets committed to purchase securities on a forward commitment
basis.
Forward Roll Transactions. To enhance current income, the Fund may
enter into forward roll transactions with respect to mortgage-related
securities. In a forward roll transaction, the Fund sells a mortgage-
related security to a financial institution, such as a bank or broker-
dealer, and simultaneously agrees to repurchase a similar security from the
institution at a later date at an agreed upon price. The securities that
are repurchased will bear the same interest rate as those sold, but
generally will be collateralized by different pools of mortgages with
different pre-payment histories than those sold. During the period between
the sale and repurchase, the Fund will not be entitled to receive interest
and principal payments on the securities sold. Proceeds of the sale will be
invested in short-term instruments, particularly repurchase agreements, and
the income from these investments, together with any additional fee income
received on the sale will generate income for the Fund exceeding the yield
on the securities sold. Forward roll transactions involve the risk that the
market value of the securities sold by the Fund may decline below the
purchase price of those securities. The Fund will maintain a segregated
account consisting of permissible liquid assets at least equal to the amount
of the repurchase price (including accrued interest).
Investment Considerations and Risks
Mortgage-Related Securities. Mortgage-related securities are complex
derivative instruments, subject to both credit and prepayment risk, and may
be more volatile and less liquid than more traditional debt securities.
Mortgage-related securities are subject to credit risks associated with the
performance of the underlying mortgage properties. Adverse changes in
economic conditions and circumstances are more likely to have an adverse
impact on mortgage-related securities secured by loans on certain types of
commercial properties than on those secured by loans on residential
properties. In addition, these securities are subject to prepayment risk,
although commercial mortgages typically have shorter maturities than
residential mortgages and prepayment protection features. Some mortgage-
related securities have structures that make their reactions to interest
rate changes and other factors difficult to predict, making their value
highly volatile.
In certain instances, the credit risk associated with mortgage-related
securities can be reduced by third party guarantees or other forms of credit
support. Improved credit risk does not reduce prepayment risk which is
unrelated to the rating assigned to the mortgage-related security.
Prepayment risk can lead to fluctuations in value of the mortgage-related
security which may be pronounced. If a mortgage-related security is
purchased at a premium, all or part of the premium may be lost if there is a
decline in the market value of the security, whether resulting from changes
in interest rates or prepayments on the underlying mortgage collateral.
Certain mortgage-related securities that may be purchased by the Fund, such
as inverse floating rate collateral mortgage obligations, have coupons that
move inversely to a multiple of a specific index which may result in a form
of leverage. As with other interest-bearing securities, the prices of
certain mortgage-related securities are inversely affected by changes in
interest rates. However, although the value of a mortgage-related security
may decline when interest rates rise, the converse is not necessarily true,
since in periods of declining interest rates the mortgages underlying the
security are more likely to be prepaid. For this and other reasons, a
mortgage-related security's stated maturity may be shortened by unscheduled
prepayments on the underlying mortgages, and, therefore, it is not possible
to predict accurately the security's return to the Fund. Moreover, with
respect to certain stripped mortgage-backed securities, if the underlying
mortgage securities experience greater than anticipated prepayments of
principal, the Fund may fail to fully recoup its initial investment even if
the securities are rated in the highest rating category by a nationally
recognized statistical rating organization. During periods of rapidly
rising interest rates, prepayments of mortgage-related securities may occur
at slower than expected rates. Slower prepayments effectively may lengthen
a mortgage-related security's expected maturity which generally would cause
the value of such security to fluctuate more widely in response to changes
in interest rates. Were the prepayments on the Fund's mortgage-related
securities to decrease broadly, the Fund's effective duration, and thus
sensitivity to interest rate fluctuations, would increase.
Simultaneous Investments. Investment decisions for the Fund are made
independently from those of other investment companies advised by the
Manager. If, however, such other investment companies desire to invest in,
or depose of, the same securities as the Fund, available investments or
opportunities for sales will be allocated equitably to each investment
company. In some cases, this procedure may adversely affect the size of the
position obtained for or disposed of by the Fund or the price paid or
received by the Fund.
Investment Restrictions
The Fund's investment objective is a fundamental policy, which cannot
be changed without approval by the holders of a majority (as defined in the
1940 Act) of the Fund's outstanding voting shares. In addition, the Fund
has adopted investment restrictions numbered 1 through 9 as fundamental
policies. Investment restrictions numbered 10 and 11 are not fundamental
policies and may be changed by a vote of a majority of the Fund's Board
members at any time. The Fund may not:
1. Purchase common stocks, preferred stocks, warrants or other equity
securities, or purchase corporate bonds or debentures, state
bonds, municipal bonds or industrial revenue bonds.
2. Borrow money, except to the extent permitted under the 1940 Act
(which currently limits borrowing to no more than 33-1/3% of the
value of the Fund's total assets).
3. Purchase securities on margin or write or purchase put or call
options or combinations thereof.
4. Underwrite the securities of other issuers.
5. Purchase or sell real estate, real estate investment trust
securities, commodities or commodity contracts, or oil and gas
interests.
6. Make loans to others except through the purchase of debt
obligations and the entry into repurchase agreements referred to
in the Fund's Prospectus. However, the Fund may lend its
portfolio securities in an amount not to exceed 33-1/3% of the
value of its total assets. Any loans of portfolio securities will
be made according to guidelines established by the Securities and
Exchange Commission and the Fund's Board.
7. Invest more than 25% of its total assets in the securities of
issuers in any single industry; provided that there shall be no
such limitation on the purchase of obligations issued or
guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies or
instrumentalities.
8. Invest in companies for the purpose of exercising control.
9. Invest in securities of other investment companies, except as they
may be acquired as part of a merger, consolidation or acquisition
of assets.
10. Pledge, mortgage, hypothecate or otherwise encumber its assets,
except to the extent necessary to secure permitted borrowings.
11. Enter into repurchase agreements providing for settlement in more
than seven days after notice or purchase securities which are
illiquid, if, in the aggregate, more than 15% of the value of the
Fund's net assets would be so invested.
If a percentage restriction is adhered to at the time of investment, a
later increase in percentage resulting from a change in values or assets
will not constitute a violation of that restriction.
MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND
The Fund's Board is responsible for the management and supervision of
the Fund. The Board approves all significant agreements between the Fund
and those companies that furnish services to the Fund. These companies are
as follows:
The Dreyfus Corporation Investment Adviser
Premier Mutual Fund Services, Inc. Distributor
Dreyfus Transfer, Inc. Transfer Agent
Mellon Bank, N.A. Custodian
Board members and officers of the Fund, together with information as to
their principal business occupations during at least the last five years,
are shown below.
Board Members of the Fund
JOSEPH S. DiMARTINO, Chairman of the Board. Since January 1995, Chairman of
the Board of various funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds. He also is
a director of The Noel Group, Inc., a venture capital company (for
which, from February 1995 until November 1997, he was Chairman of the
Board), The Muscular Dystrophy Association, HealthPlan Services
Corporation, a provider of marketing, administrative and risk
management services to health and other benefit programs, Carlyle
Industries, Inc. (formerly, Belding Heminway, Inc.), a button packager
and distributor, Career Blazers, Inc. (formerly, Staffing Resources,
Inc.), a temporary placement agency, and Century Business Services,
Inc., a provider of various outsourcing functions for small and medium
sized companies. For more than five years prior to January 1995, he
was President, a director and, until August 1994, Chief Operating
Officer of the Manager and Executive Vice President and a director of
Dreyfus Service Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager
and, until August 24, 1994, the Fund's distributor. From August 1994
until December 31, 1994, he was a director of Mellon Bank Corporation.
He is 55 years old and his address is 200 Park Avenue, New York, New
York 10166.
LUCY WILSON BENSON, Board Member. President of Benson and Associates,
consultants to business and government. Mrs. Benson is a director of
Communications Satellite Corporation, General RE Corporation and
Logistics Management Institute. She is also a Trustee of the Alfred P.
Sloan Foundation, Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Lafayette
College, Vice Chairman of the Citizens Network for Foreign Affairs and
a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. From 1980 to 1994, Mrs.
Benson was a director of The Grumman Corporation. Mrs. Benson served
as a consultant to the U.S. Department of State and to SRI
International from 1980 to 1981. From 1977 to 1980, she was Under
Secretary of State for Security Assistance, Science and Technology.
She is 70 years old and her address is 46 Sunset Avenue, Amherst,
Massachusetts 01002.
DAVID W. BURKE, Board Member. Chairman of the Broadcasting Board of
Governors, an independent board within the United States Information
Agency, since August 1995. From August 1994 to December 1994, Mr.
Burke was a Consultant to the Manager, and from October 1990 to August
1994, he was Vice President and Chief Administrative Officer of the
Manager. From 1977 to 1990, Mr. Burke was involved in the management of
national television news, as Vice-President and Executive Vice
President of ABC News, and subsequently as President of CBS News. He
is 61 years old and his address is 197 Eighth Street, Charleston,
Massachusetts 02109.
MARTIN D. FIFE, Board Member. Chairman of the Board of Magar Inc., a
company specializing in financial products and developing early stage
companies. In addition, Mr. Fife is Chairman of the Board and Chief
Executive Officer of Skysat Communications Network Corporation, a
company developing telecommunications systems. Mr. Fife also serves on
the boards of various other companies. He is 69 years old and his
address is 405 Lexington Avenue, New York, New York 10174.
WHITNEY I. GERARD, Board Member. Partner of the New York City law firm of
Chadbourne & Parke. He is 62 years old and his address is 30
Rockefeller Plaza, New York, New York 10112.
ARTHUR A. HARTMAN, Board Member. Senior consultant with APCO Associates
Inc. From 1981 to 1987, he was United States Ambassador to the former
Soviet Union. He is a director of the ITT Hartford Insurance Group,
Ford Meter Box Corporation and Lawter International and a member of the
advisory councils of several other companies, research institutes and
foundations. Ambassador Hartman is Chairman of First NIS Regional Fund
(ING/Barings Management). He is a former President of the Harvard
Board of Overseers. He is 70 years old and his address is 2738
McKinley Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20015.
GEORGE L. PERRY, Board Member. An economist and Senior Fellow at the
Brookings Institution since 1969. He is co-director of the Brookings
Panel on Economic Activity and editor of its journal, The Brookings
Papers. He is also a director of the State Farm Mutual Automobile
Association, State Farm Life Insurance Company and Federal Realty
Investment Trust. He is 62 years old and his address is 1775
Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036.
PAUL D. WOLFOWITZ, Board Member. Dean of The Paul H. Nitze School of
Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University. From 1989
to 1993, he was Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. From 1986 to
1989, he was the U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Indonesia. From
1982 to 1986, he was Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and
Pacific Affairs of the Department of State. He is 52 years old and his
address is 1740 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036.
For so long as the Fund's plan described in the section captioned
"Shareholder Services Plan" remains in effect, the Board members of the Fund
who are not "interested persons" of the Fund, as defined in the 1940 Act,
will be selected and nominated by the Board members who are not "interested
persons" of the Fund.
The Fund typically pays its Board members an annual retainer and a per
meeting fee and reimburses them for their expenses. The Chairman of the
Board receives an additional 25% of such compensation. Emeritus Board
members are entitled to receive an annual retainer and a per meeting fee of
one-half the amount paid to them as Board members. The aggregate amount of
compensation paid to each Board member by the Fund for the fiscal year ended
November 30, 1998, and by all other funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds for
which such person is a Board member (the number of which is set forth in
parenthesis next to each Board member's total compensation) for the year
ended December 31, 1998, were as follows:
Total
Aggregate Compensation from
Name of Board Compensation Fund and Fund
Member from Fund* Complex Paid to
Board Members
______________ ____________ _________________
Joseph S. DiMartino $ $ ( )
Lucy Wilson Benson $ $ ( )
David W. Burke $ $ ( )
Martin D. Fife $ $ ( )
Whitney I. Gerard $ $ ( )
Arthur A. Hartman $ $ ( )
George L. Perry $ $ ( )
Paul D. Wolfowitz $ $ ( )
_____________________
* Amount does not include reimbursed expenses for attending Board
meetings, which amounted to $__________ for all Board members as a
group.
Officers of the Fund
MARIE E. CONNOLLY, President and Treasurer. President, Chief Executive
Officer, Chief Compliance Officer and a director of the Distributor and
Funds Distributor, Inc., the ultimate parent of which is Boston
Institutional Group, Inc., and an officer of other investment companies
advised or administered by the Manager. She is 41 years old.
MARGARET W. CHAMBERS, Vice President and Secretary. Senior Vice President
and General Counsel of Funds Distributor, Inc., and an officer of other
investment companies advised or administered by the Manager. From
August 1996 to March 1998, she was Vice President and Assistant General
Counsel for Loomis, Sayles & Company, L.P. From January 1986 to July
1996, she was an associate with the law firm of Ropes & Gray. She is
38 years old.
MICHAEL S. PETRUCELLI, Vice President, Assistant Secretary and Assistant
Treasurer. Senior Vice President of Funds Distributor, Inc., and an
officer of other investment companies advised or administered by the
Manager. From December 1989 through November 1996, he was employed by
GE Investment Services where he held various financial, business
development and compliance positions. He also served as Treasurer of
the GE Funds and as a Director of GE Investment Services. He is 36
years old.
STEPHANIE D. PIERCE, Vice President, Assistant Secretary and Assistant
Treasurer. Vice President and Client Development Manager of Funds
Distributor, Inc., and an officer of other investment companies advised
or administered by the Manager. From April 1997 to March 1998, she was
employed as a Relationship Manager with Citibank, N.A. From August
1995 to April 1997, she was an Assistant Vice President with Hudson
Valley Bank, and from September 1990 to August 1995, she was Second
Vice President with Chase Manhattan Bank. She is 30 years old.
MARY A. NELSON, Vice President and Assistant Treasurer. Vice President of
the Distributor and Funds Distributor, Inc., and an officer of other
investment companies advised or administered by the Manager. From
September 1989 to July 1994, she was an Assistant Vice President and
Client Manager for The Boston Company, Inc. She is 34 years old.
GEORGE A. RIO, Vice President and Assistant Treasurer. Executive Vice
President and Client Service Director of Funds Distributor, Inc., and
an officer of other investment companies advised or administered by the
Manager. From June 1995 to March 1998, he was Senior Vice President
and Senior Key Account Manager for Putnam Mutual Funds. From May 1994
to June 1995, he was Director of Business Development for First Data
Corporation. From September 1983 to May 1994, he was Senior Vice
President and Manager of Client Services and Director of Internal Audit
at The Boston Company, Inc. He is 43 years old.
JOSEPH F. TOWER, III, Vice President and Assistant Treasurer. Senior Vice
President, Treasurer, Chief Financial Officer and a director of the
Distributor and Funds Distributor, Inc., and an officer of other
investment companies advised or administered by the Manager. From July
1988 to August 1994, he was employed by The Boston Company, Inc. where
he held various management positions in the Corporate Finance and
Treasury areas. He is 36 years old.
DOUGLAS C. CONROY, Vice President and Assistant Secretary. Assistant Vice
President of Funds Distributor, Inc., and an officer of other
investment companies advised or administered by the Manager. From
April 1993 to January 1995, he was a Senior Fund Accountant for
Investors Bank & Trust Company. He is 29 years old.
CHRISTOPHER J. KELLEY, Vice President and Assistant Secretary. Vice
President and Senior Associate General Counsel of Funds Distributor,
Inc., and an officer of other investment companies advised or
administered by the Manager. From April 1994 to July 1996, he was
Assistant Counsel at Forum Financial Group. He is 33 years old.
KATHLEEN K. MORRISEY, Vice President and Assistant Secretary. Manager of
Treasury Services Administration of Funds Distributor, Inc., and an
officer of other investment companies advised or administered by the
Manager. From July 1994 to November 1995, she was a Fund Accountant
for Investors Bank & Trust Company. She is 26 years old.
ELBA VASQUEZ, Vice President and Assistant Secretary. Assistant Vice
President of Funds Distributor, Inc., and an officer of other
investment companies advised or administered by the Manager. From
March 1990 to May 1996, she was employed by U.S. Trust Company of New
York where she held various sales and marketing positions. She is 37
years old.
The address of each officer of the Fund is 200 Park Avenue, New York,
New York 10166.
The Fund's Board members and officers, as a group, owned less than 1%
of the Fund's shares outstanding on __________, 1999.
The following persons are known by the Fund to own of record 5% or more
of the Fund's outstanding voting securities as of __________, 1999:
[Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., Reinvest Account ATTN: Mutual Funds
Department, 101 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, California 94104-4122 -
%; Lark & Co., Attn. Trust Operations, PO Box 1471, Little Rock AR.
72203-1471- %].
MANAGEMENT ARRANGEMENTS
Investment Adviser. The Manager is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Mellon
Bank, N.A., which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Mellon Bank Corporation
("Mellon"). Mellon is a publicly owned multibank holding company
incorporated under Pennsylvania law in 1971 and registered under the Federal
Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as amended. Mellon provides a
comprehensive range of financial products and services in domestic and
selected international markets. Mellon is among the twenty-five largest
bank holding companies in the United States based on total assets.
The Manager provides management services pursuant to the Management
Agreement (the "Agreement") with the Fund dated August 24, 1994, which is
subject to annual approval by (i) the Fund's Board or (ii) vote of a
majority (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the outstanding voting securities
of the Fund, provided that in either event the continuance also is approved
by a majority of the Board members who are not "interested persons" (as
defined in the 1940 Act) of the Fund or the Manager, by vote cast in person
at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval. The
Agreement was approved by shareholders on August 4, 1994, and was last
approved by the Fund's Board, including a majority of the Board members who
are not "interested persons" of any party to the Agreement, at a meeting
held on __________, 1998. The Agreement is terminable without penalty, on
60 days' notice, by the Fund's Board or by vote of the holders of a majority
of the Fund's shares or, upon not less than 90 days' notice, by the Manager.
The Agreement will terminate automatically in the event of its assignment
(as defined in the 1940 Act).
The following persons are officers and/or directors of the Manager:
Christopher M. Condron, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer;
Stephen E. Canter, President, Chief Operating Officer, Chief Investment
Officer and a director; Lawrence S. Kash, Vice Chairman and a director; J.
David Officer, Vice Chairman and a director; Ronald P. O'Hanley III, Vice
Chairman; Thomas F. Eggers, Vice Chairman--Institutional; William T.
Sandalls, Jr., Executive Vice President; Mark N. Jacobs, Vice President,
General Counsel and Secretary; Patrice M. Kozlowski, Vice President--
Corporate Communications; Mary Beth Leibig, Vice President--Human Resources;
Andrew S. Wasser, Vice President--Information Systems; Theodore A. Schachar,
Vice President; Wendy Strutt, Vice President; Richard Terres, Vice
President; William H. Maresca, Controller; James Bitetto, Assistant
Secretary; Steven F. Newman, Assistant Secretary; and Mandell L. Berman,
Burton C. Borgelt, Steven G. Elliot, Martin C. McGuinn, Richard W. Sabo and
Richard F. Syron, directors.
The Manager manages the Fund's portfolio of investments in accordance
with the stated policies of the Fund, subject to the approval of the Fund's
Board. The Manager is responsible for investment decisions and provides the
Fund with portfolio managers who are authorized by the Fund's Board to
execute purchases and sales of securities. The Manager also maintains a
research department with a professional staff of portfolio managers and
securities analysts who provide research services for the Fund and for other
funds advised by the Manager. The Fund's portfolio managers are Michael
Hoeh, Kevin McClintock, C. Matthew Olsen and Gerald E. Thunelius, the Fund's
primary portfolio manager.
All expenses incurred in the operation of the Fund are borne by the
Fund, except to the extent specifically assumed by the Manager. The
expenses borne by the Fund include: taxes, interest, loan commitment fees,
interest and distributions paid on securities sold short, brokerage fees and
commissions, if any, fees of Board members who are not officers, directors,
employees or holders of 5% or more of the outstanding voting securities of
the Manager or any of its affiliates, Securities and Exchange Commission
fees, state Blue Sky qualification fees, advisory fees, charges of
custodians, transfer and dividend disbursing agents' fees, certain insurance
premiums, industry association fees, outside auditing and legal expenses,
costs of independent pricing services, costs of maintaining the Fund's
existence, costs attributable to investor services (including, without
limitation, telephone and personnel expenses), costs of shareholders'
reports and meetings, costs of preparing and printing prospectuses and
statements of additional information for regulatory purposes and for
distribution to existing shareholders, and any extraordinary expenses.
The Manager maintains office facilities on behalf of the Fund, and
furnishes statistical and research data, clerical help, accounting, data
processing, bookkeeping and internal auditing and certain other required
services to the Fund. The Manager may pay the Distributor for shareholder
services from the Manager's own assets, including past profits but not
including the management fee paid by the Fund. The Distributor may use part
or all of such payments to pay securities dealers, banks or other financial
institutions in respect of these services. The Manager also may make such
advertising and promotional expenditures, using its own resources, as it
from time to time deems appropriate.
As compensation for the Manager's services, the Fund has agreed to pay
the Manager a monthly management fee at the annual rate of .50% of the value
of the Fund's average daily net assets. All fees and expenses are accrued
daily and deducted before payment of dividends to investors. The management
fees payable for the fiscal years ended November 30, 1996, 1997 and 1998
amounted to $2,850,020, $2,627,588 and $__________, respectively; however,
pursuant to undertakings in effect, the Manager reduced its fees by $58,909
in fiscal year 1997 [and $__________ in fiscal year 1998], resulting in net
fees paid of $2,568,679 in fiscal year 1997 [and $__________ in fiscal year
1998].
The Manager has agreed that if in any fiscal year the aggregate
expenses of the Fund, exclusive of taxes, brokerage, interest on borrowings
and (with the prior written consent of the necessary state securities
commissions) extraordinary expenses, but including the management fee,
exceed 1-1/2% of the average value of the Fund's net assets for the fiscal
year, the Fund may deduct from the payment to be made to the Manager under
the Agreement, or the Manager will bear, such excess expense. Such deduction
or payment, if any, will be estimated daily, and reconciled and effected or
paid, as the case may be, on a monthly basis.
The aggregate of the fees payable to the Manager is not subject to
reduction as the value of the Fund's net assets increases.
Distributor. The Distributor, located at 60 State Street, Boston,
Massachusetts 02109, serves as the Fund's distributor on a best efforts
basis pursuant to an agreement which is renewable annually.
The Distributor may pay dealers a fee up to .5% of the amount invested
through such dealers in Fund shares by employees participating in qualified
or non-qualified employee benefit plans or other programs where (i) the
employers or affiliated employers maintaining such plans or programs have a
minimum of 250 employees eligible for participation in such plans or
programs, or (ii) such plan's or program's aggregate investment in the
Dreyfus Family or Funds or certain other products made available by the
Distributor to such plan or programs exceeds $1,000,000 ("Eligible Benefit
Plans"). Shares of funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds then held by
Eligible Benefit Plans will be aggregated to determine the fee payable. The
Distributor reserves the right to cease paying these fees at any time. The
Distributor will pay such fees from its own funds, other than amounts
received from the Fund, including past profits or any other source available
to it.
Transfer and Dividend Disbursing Agent and Custodian. Dreyfus
Transfer, Inc. (the "Transfer Agent"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the
Manager, P.O. Box 9671, Providence, Rhode Island 02940-9671, is the Fund's
transfer and dividend disbursing agent. Under a transfer agency agreement
with the Fund, the Transfer Agent arranges for the maintenance of
shareholder account records for the Fund, the handling of certain
communications between shareholders and the Fund and the payment of
dividends and distributions payable by the Fund. For these services, the
Transfer Agent receives a monthly fee computed on the basis of the number of
shareholder accounts it maintains for the Fund during the month, and is
reimbursed for certain out-of-pocket expenses.
Mellon Bank, N.A. (the "Custodian"), One Mellon Bank Center,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15258, is the Fund's custodian. Under a custody
agreement with the Fund, the Custodian holds the Fund's securities and keeps
all necessary accounts and records. For its custody services, the Custodian
receives a monthly fee based on the market value of the Fund's assets held
in custody and receives certain securities transactions charges.
HOW TO BUY SHARES
General. Fund shares are sold without a sales charge. You may be
charged a fee if you effect transactions in Fund shares through a securities
dealer, bank or other financial institution. Stock certificates are issued
only upon your written request. No certificates are issued for fractional
shares. The Fund reserves the right to reject any purchase order.
The minimum initial investment is $2,500, or $1,000 if you are a client
of a securities dealer, bank or other financial institution which maintains
an omnibus account in the Fund and has made an aggregate minimum initial
purchase for its customers of $2,500. Subsequent investments must be at
least $100. However, the minimum initial investment is $750 for Dreyfus-
sponsored Keogh Plans, IRAs (including regular IRAs, spousal IRAs for a non-
working spouse, Roth IRAs, IRAs set up under a Simplified Employee Pension
Plan ("SEP-IRAs") and rollover IRAs) and 403(b)(7) Plans with only one
participant and $500 for Dreyfus-sponsored Education IRAs, with no minimum
for subsequent purchases. The initial investment must be accompanied by the
Account Application. For full-time or part-time employees of the Manager or
any of its affiliates or subsidiaries, directors of the Manager, Board
members of a fund advised by the Manager, including members of the Fund's
Board, or the spouse or minor child of any of the foregoing, the minimum
initial investment is $1,000. For full-time or part-time employees of the
Manager or any of its affiliates or subsidiaries who elect to have a portion
of their pay directly deposited into their Fund accounts, the minimum
initial investment is $50. The Fund reserves the right to offer Fund shares
without regard to minimum purchase requirements to employees participating
in certain qualified or non-qualified employee benefit plans or other
programs where contributions or account information can be transmitted in a
manner and form acceptable to the Fund. The Fund reserves the right to vary
further the initial and subsequent investment minimum requirements at any
time.
Fund shares also are offered without regard to the minimum initial
investment requirements through Dreyfus-Automatic Asset Builderr, Dreyfus
Government Direct Deposit Privilege or Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan pursuant
to the Dreyfus Step Program described under "Shareholder Services." These
services enable you to make regularly scheduled investments and may provide
you with a convenient way to invest for long-term financial goals. You
should be aware, however, that periodic investment plans do not guarantee a
profit and will not protect you against loss in a declining market.
Shares are sold on a continuous basis at the net asset value per share
next determined after an order in proper form is received by the Transfer
Agent or other entity authorized to receive orders on behalf of the Fund.
Net asset value per share is determined as of the close of trading on the
floor of the New York Stock Exchange (currently 4:00 p.m., New York time),
on each day the New York Stock Exchange is open for business. Net asset
value per share is computed by dividing the value of the Fund's net assets
(i.e., the value of its assets less liabilities) by the total number of
shares outstanding. The Fund's investments are valued by an independent
pricing service approved by the Fund's Board and are valued at fair value as
determined by the pricing service under the general supervision of the
Board. For further information regarding the methods employed in valuing
Fund investments, see "Determination of Net Asset Value."
Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege. You may purchase shares by telephone
if you have checked the appropriate box and supplied the necessary
information on the Account Application or have filed a Shareholder Services
Form with the Transfer Agent. The proceeds will be transferred between the
bank account designated in one of these documents and your fund account.
Only a bank account maintained in a domestic financial institution which is
an Automated Clearing House ("ACH") member may be so designated.
Dreyfus TeleTransfer purchase orders may be made at any time. Purchase
orders received by 4:00 p.m., New York time, on any business day that the
Transfer Agent or the New York Stock Exchange are open for business will be
credited to the shareholder's Fund account on the next bank business day
following such purchase order. Purchase orders made after 4:00 p.m., New
York time, on any business day the Transfer Agent and the New York Stock
Exchange are open for business, or orders made on Saturday, Sunday or any
Fund holiday (e.g., when the New York Stock Exchange is not open for
business), will be credited to the shareholder's Fund account on the second
bank business day following such purchase order. To qualify to use Dreyfus
TeleTransfer Privilege, the initial payment for purchase of Fund shares must
be drawn on, and redemption proceeds paid to, the same bank and account as
are designated on the Account Application or Shareholder Services Form on
file. If the proceeds of a particular redemption are to be wired to an
account at any other bank, the request must be in writing and signature
guaranteed. See "How to Redeem Shares--Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege."
Procedures for Multiple Accounts. Special procedures have been
designed for banks and other institutions that wish to open multiple
accounts. The institutions may open a single master account by filing one
application with the Transfer Agent, and may reopen individual sub-accounts
at the same time or at some later date. The Transfer Agent will provide
each institution with a written confirmation for each transaction in a
sub-account. Duplicate confirmations may be transmitted to the beneficial
owner of the sub-account at no additional charge. Upon receipt of funds for
investment by interbank wire, the Transfer Agent will promptly confirm the
receipt of the investment by telephone or return wire to the transmitting
bank, if the investor so requests.
The Transfer Agent also will provide each institution with a monthly
statement setting forth, for each sub-account, the share balance, income
earned for the month, income earned for the year to date and the total
current value of the account.
Reopening an Account. You may reopen an account with a minimum
investment of $100 without filing a new Account Application during the
calendar year the account is closed or during the following calendar year,
provided the information on the old Account Application is still applicable.
SHAREHOLDER SERVICES PLAN
The Fund has adopted a Shareholder Services Plan pursuant to which the
Fund reimburses Dreyfus Service Corporation an amount not to exceed an
annual rate of .25% of the value of the Fund's average daily net assets for
certain allocated expenses of providing personal services and/or maintaining
shareholder accounts. The services provided may include personal services
related to shareholder accounts, such as answering shareholder inquiries
regarding the Fund and providing reports and other information, and services
related to the maintenance of shareholder accounts.
A quarterly report of the amounts expended under the Shareholder
Services Plan, and the purposes for which such expenditures were incurred,
must be made to the Fund's Board for its review. In addition, the
Shareholder Services Plan provides that material amendments of the
Shareholder Services Plan must be approved by the Fund's Board, and by the
Board members who are not "interested persons" (as defined in the 1940 Act)
of the Fund and have no direct or indirect financial interest in the
operation of the Shareholder Services Plan by vote cast in person at a
meeting called for the purpose of considering such amendments. The
Shareholder Services Plan is subject to annual approval by such vote of the
Board members cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting
on the Shareholder Services Plan. The Shareholder Services Plan was last so
approved by the Board at a meeting held on __________, 1998. The
Shareholder Services Plan is terminable at any time by vote of a majority of
the Board members who are not "interested persons" and have no direct or
indirect financial interest in the operation of the Shareholder Services
Plan.
For the fiscal year ended November 30, 1998, the Fund was charged
$_________ pursuant to the Shareholder Services Plan.
HOW TO REDEEM SHARES
Check Redemption Privilege. The Fund provides Redemption Checks
("Checks") automatically upon opening an account, unless you specifically
refuse the Check Redemption Privilege by checking the applicable "No" box on
the Account Application. The Check Redemption Privilege may be established
for an existing account by a separate signed Shareholder Services Form.
Checks will be sent only to the registered owner(s) of the account and only
to the address of record. The Account Application, or Shareholder Services
Form must be manually signed by the registered owner(s). Checks may be made
payable to the order of any person in an amount of $500 or more. When a
Check is presented to the Transfer Agent for payment, the Transfer Agent, as
your agent, will cause the Fund to redeem a sufficient number of full and
fractional shares in your account to cover the amount of the Check.
Dividends are earned until the Check clears. After clearance, a copy of the
Check will be returned to you. You generally will be subject to the same
rules and regulations that apply to checking accounts, although election of
this Privilege creates only a shareholder-transfer agent relationship with
the Transfer Agent.
You should date your Checks with the current date when you write them.
Please do not postdate your Checks. If you do, the Transfer Agent will
honor, upon presentment, even if presented before the date of the Check, all
postdated Checks which are dated within six months of presentment for
payment, if they are otherwise in good order.
Checks are free, but the Transfer Agent will impose a fee for stopping
payment of a Check upon your request or if the Transfer Agent cannot honor a
Check due to insufficient funds or other valid reason. If the amount of the
Check is greater than value of the shares in an investor's account, the
Check will be returned marked insufficient funds. Checks should not be used
to close an account.
This Privilege will be terminated immediately, without notice, with
respect to any account which is, or becomes, subject to backup withholding
on redemptions. Any Check written on an account which has become subject to
backup withholding on redemptions will not be honored by the Transfer Agent.
If you hold shares in a Dreyfus-sponsored IRA account, you may be permitted
to make withdrawals from your IRA account using checks furnished to you by
The Dreyfus Trust Company.
Wire Redemption Privilege. By using this Privilege, you authorize the
Transfer Agent to act on wire, telephone or letter redemption instructions
from any person representing himself or herself to be you, and reasonably
believed by the Transfer Agent to be genuine. Ordinarily, the Fund will
initiate payment for shares redeemed pursuant to this Privilege on the next
business day after receipt if the Transfer Agent receives the redemption
request in proper form. Redemption proceeds ($1,000 minimum) will be
transferred by Federal Reserve wire only to the commercial bank account
specified by you on the Account Application or Shareholder Services Form or
to a correspondent bank if your bank is not a member of the Federal Reserve
System. Fees ordinarily are imposed by such bank and borne by the investor.
Immediate notification by the correspondent bank to your bank is necessary
to avoid a delay in crediting the funds to your bank account.
If you have access to telegraphic equipment, you may wire redemption
requests to the Transfer Agent by employing the following transmittal code
which may be used for domestic or overseas transmissions:
Transfer Agent's
Transmittal Code Answer Back Sign
144295 144295 TSSG PREP
If you do not have direct access to telegraphic equipment, you may have
the wire transmitted by contacting a TRT Cables operator at 1-800-645-7171,
toll free. You should advise the operator that the above transmittal code
must be used and should also inform the operator of the Transfer Agent's
answer back sign.
To change the commercial bank or account designated to receive
redemption proceeds, a written request must be sent to the Transfer Agent.
This request must be signed by each shareholder, with each signature
guaranteed as described below under "Share Certificates; Signatures."
Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege. You may request by telephone that
redemption proceeds be transferred between your Fund account and your bank
account. Only a bank account maintained in a domestic financial institution
which is an ACH member may be designated. Holders of jointly registered
Fund or bank accounts may redeem through the Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege
for transfer to their bank account not more than $250,000 within any 30-day
period. You should be aware that if you have selected the Dreyfus
TeleTransfer Privilege, any request for a wire redemption will be effected
as a Dreyfus TeleTransfer transaction through the ACH system unless a more
prompt transmittal specifically is requested. Redemption proceeds will be
on deposit in your account at an ACH member bank ordinarily two business
days after receipt of the redemption request. See "How to Buy
Shares--Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege."
Share Certificates; Signatures. Any certificates representing Fund
shares to be redeemed must be submitted with the redemption request.
Written redemption requests must be signed by each shareholder, including
each owner of a joint account, and each signature must be guaranteed.
Signatures on endorsed certificates submitted for redemption also must be
guaranteed. The Transfer Agent has adopted standards and procedures pursuant
to which signature-guarantees in proper form generally will be accepted from
domestic banks, brokers, dealers, credit unions, national securities
exchanges, registered securities associations, clearing agencies and savings
associations, as well as from participants in the New York Stock Exchange
Medallion Program, the Securities Transfer Agents Medallion Program
("STAMP") and the Stock Exchanges Medallion program. Guarantees must be
signed by an authorized signatory of the guarantor and "Signature-
Guaranteed" must appear with the signature. The Transfer Agent may request
additional documentation from corporations, executors, administrators,
trustees or guardians, and may accept other suitable verification
arrangements from foreign investors, such as consular verification. For
more information with respect to signature-guarantees, please call one of
the telephone numbers listed on the cover.
Redemption Commitment. The Fund has committed itself to pay in cash
all redemption requests by any shareholder of record, limited in amount
during any 90-day period to the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of the value of the
Fund's net assets at the beginning of such period. Such commitment is
irrevocable without the prior approval of the Securities and Exchange
Commission and is a fundamental policy of the Fund which may not be changed
without shareholder approval. In the case of requests for redemption in
excess of such amount, the Board reserves the right to make payments in
whole or in part in securities or other assets of the Fund in case of an
emergency or any time a cash distribution would impair the liquidity of the
Fund to the detriment of the existing shareholders. In such event, the
securities would be valued in the same manner as the Fund's portfolio is
valued. If the recipient sold such securities, brokerage charges might be
incurred.
Suspension of Redemption. The right of redemption may be suspended or
the date of payment postponed (a) during any period when the New York Stock
Exchange is closed (other than customary weekend and holiday closings), (b)
when trading in the markets the Fund ordinarily utilizes is restricted, or
when an emergency exists as determined by the Securities and Exchange
Commission so that disposal of the Fund's investments or determination of
its net asset value is not reasonably practicable, or (c) for such other
periods as the Securities and Exchange Commission by order may permit to
protect the Fund's shareholders.
SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
Fund Exchanges. You may purchase, in exchange for shares of the Fund,
shares of certain other funds managed or administered by the Manager, to the
extent such shares are offered for sale in your state of residence. Shares
of other funds purchased by exchange will be purchased on the basis of
relative net asset value per share, as follows:
A. Exchanges for shares of funds that are offered without a sales
load will be made without a sales load.
B. Shares of funds purchased without a sales load may be exchanged
for shares of other funds sold with a sales load, and the
applicable sales load will be deducted.
C. Shares of funds purchased with a sales load may be exchanged
without a sales load for shares of funds sold without a sales
load.
D. Shares of funds purchased with a sales load, shares of funds
acquired by a previous exchange from shares purchased with a sales
load, and additional shares acquired through reinvestment of
dividends or distributions of any such funds (collectively
referred to herein as "Purchased Shares") may be exchanged for
shares of other funds sold with a sales load (referred to herein
as "Offered Shares"), provided that, if the sales load applicable
to the Offered Shares exceeds the maximum sales load that could
have been imposed in connection with the Purchased Shares (at the
time the Purchased Shares were acquired), without giving effect to
any reduced loads, the difference will be deducted.
To accomplish an exchange under item D above, you must notify the
Transfer Agent of your prior ownership of fund shares and your account
number.
To request an exchange, you must give exchange instructions to the
Transfer Agent in writing or by telephone. The ability to issue exchange
instructions by telephone is given to all Fund shareholders automatically,
unless you check the applicable "No" box on the Account Application,
indicating you specifically refuse this privilege. By using the Telephone
Exchange Privilege, you authorize the Transfer Agent to act on telephonic
instructions (including over The Dreyfus Touchr automated telephone system)
from any person representing himself or herself to be you and believed
reasonably by the Transfer Agent to be genuine. Telephone exchanges may be
subject to limitations as to the amount involved or the number of telephone
exchanges permitted. Shares that have been issued in certificate form are
not eligible for telephone exchange. No fees currently are charged
shareholders directly in connection with exchanges, although the Fund
reserves the right, upon not less than 60 days' written notice, to charge
shareholders a nominal administrative fee in accordance with rules
promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
To establish a personal retirement plan by exchange, shares of the fund
being exchanged must have a value of at least the minimum initial investment
required for the fund into which the exchange is being made.
Dreyfus Auto-Exchange Privilege. Dreyfus Auto-Exchange Privilege
permits you to purchase, in exchange for shares of the Fund, shares of
certain other funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds. This Privilege is
available only for existing accounts. Shares will be exchanged on the basis
of relative net asset value as described above under "Fund Exchanges."
Enrollment in or modification or cancellation of this Privilege is effective
three business days following notification by the investor. You will be
notified if your account falls below the amount designated to be exchanged
under this Privilege. In this case, your account will fall to zero unless
additional investments are made in excess of the designated amount prior to
the next Auto-Exchange transaction. Shares held under IRA and other
retirement plans are eligible for this Privilege. Exchanges of IRA shares
may be made between IRA accounts and from regular accounts to IRA accounts,
but not from IRA accounts to regular accounts. With respect to all other
retirement accounts, exchanges may be made only among those accounts.
Shareholder Services Forms and prospectuses of the other funds may be
obtained by calling 1-800-645-6561. The Fund reserves the right to reject
any exchange request in whole or in part. Shares may be exchanged only
between accounts having identical names and other identifying designations.
The Fund Exchanges service or the Dreyfus Auto-Exchange Privilege may be
modified or terminated at any time upon notice to shareholders.
Dreyfus-Automatic Asset Builderr. Dreyfus-Automatic Asset Builder
permits you to purchase Fund shares (minimum of $100 and maximum of $150,000
per transaction) at regular intervals selected by you. Fund shares are
purchased by transferring funds from the bank account designated by you.
Dreyfus Government Direct Deposit Privilege. Dreyfus Government Direct
Deposit Privilege enables you to purchase Fund shares (minimum of $100 and
maximum of $50,000 per transaction) by having Federal salary, Social
Security, or certain veterans', military or other payments from the U.S.
Government automatically deposited into your fund account. You may deposit
as much of such payments as you elect.
Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan. Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan permits you
to purchase Fund shares (minimum of $100 per transaction) automatically on a
regular basis. Depending upon your employer's direct deposit program, you
may have part or all of your paycheck transferred to your existing Dreyfus
account electronically through the ACH system at each pay period. To
establish a Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan account, you must file an
authorization form with your employer's payroll department. It is the sole
responsibility of your employer, not the Distributor, the Manager, the Fund,
the Transfer Agent or any other person, to arrange for transactions under
the Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan.
Dreyfus Step Program. The Dreyfus Step Program enables you to purchase
Fund shares without regard to the Fund's minimum initial investment
requirements through Dreyfus-Automatic Asset Builderr, Dreyfus Government
Direct Deposit Privilege or Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan. To establish a
Dreyfus Step Program account, you must supply the necessary information on
the Account Application and file the required authorization form(s) with the
Transfer Agent. For more information concerning this Program, or to request
the necessary authorization form(s), please call toll free 1-800-782-6620.
You may terminate your participation in this Program at any time by
discontinuing your participation in Dreyfus-Automatic Asset Builder, Dreyfus
Government Direct Deposit Privilege or Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan, as the
case may be, as provided under the terms of such Privilege(s). The Fund may
modify or terminate this Program at any time.
Dreyfus Dividend Options. Dreyfus Dividend Sweep allows you to invest
automatically on the payment date your dividends or dividends and capital
gain distributions, if any, from the Fund in shares of certain other funds
in the Dreyfus Family of Funds of which you are a shareholder. Shares of
other funds purchased pursuant to this privilege will be purchased on the
basis of relative net asset value per share as follows:
A. Dividends and distributions paid by a fund may be invested without
imposition of a sales load in shares of other funds that are
offered without a sales load.
B. Dividends and distributions paid by a fund which does not charge a
sales load may be invested in shares of other funds sold with a
sales load, and the applicable sales load will be deducted.
C. Dividends and distributions paid by a fund that charges a sales
load may be invested in shares of other funds sold with a sales
load (referred to herein as "Offered Shares"), provided, that if
the sales load applicable to the Offered Shares exceeds the
maximum sales load charged by the fund from which dividends or
distributions are being swept, without giving effect to any
reduced loads, the difference will be deducted.
D. Dividends and distributions paid by a fund may be invested in
shares of other funds that impose a contingent deferred sales
charge ("CDSC") and the applicable CDSC, if any, will be imposed
upon redemption of such shares.
Dreyfus Dividend ACH permits you to transfer electronically dividends
or dividends and capital gain distributions, if any, from the Fund to a
designated bank account. Only an account maintained at a domestic financial
institution which is an ACH member may be so designated. Banks may charge a
fee for this service.
Monthly or Quarterly Distribution Plans. The Monthly or Quarterly
Distribution Plans permit you to receive monthly or quarterly payments from
the Fund consisting of proceeds from the redemption of shares purchased for
your account through the automatic reinvestment of dividends declared on
your account during the preceding month or calendar quarter.
You may open a Monthly or Quarterly Distribution Plan by submitting a
request to the Transfer Agent. A Monthly or Quarterly Distribution Plan may
be ended at any time by you, the Fund or the Transfer Agent. Shares for
which certificates have been issued must be presented before redemption
under the Monthly or Quarterly Distribution Plans.
Automatic Withdrawal Plan. The Automatic Withdrawal Plan permits you
to request withdrawal of a specified dollar amount (minimum of $50) on
either a monthly or quarterly basis if you have a $5,000 minimum account.
Withdrawal payments are the proceeds from sales of Fund shares, not the
yield on the shares. If withdrawal payments exceed reinvested dividends and
distributions, your shares will be reduced and eventually may be depleted.
Automatic Withdrawal may be terminated at any time by you, the Fund or the
Transfer Agent. Shares for which certificates have been issued may not be
redeemed through the Automatic Withdrawal Plan.
Corporate Pension/Profit-Sharing and Personal Retirement Plans. The
Fund makes available to corporations a variety of prototype pension and
profit sharing plans including a 401(k) Salary Reduction Plan. In addition,
the Fund makes available Keogh Plans, IRAs (including regular IRAs, spousal
IRAs for a non-working spouse, SEP-IRAs, Roth IRAs, Education IRAs and
rollover IRAs) and 403(b)(7) Plans. Plan support services are also
available.
If you wish to purchase Fund shares in conjunction with a Keogh Plan, a
403(b)(7) Plan or an IRA, including a SEP-IRA, you may request from the
Distributor forms for adoption of such plans.
The entity acting as custodian for Keogh Plans, 403(b)(7) Plans or IRAs
may charge a fee, payment of which could require the liquidation of shares.
All fees charged are described in the appropriate form.
Shares may be purchased in connection with these plans only by direct
remittance to the entity acting as custodian. Purchases for these plans may
not be made in advance of receipt of funds.
You should read the prototype retirement plan and the appropriate form
of custodial agreement for further details as to eligibility, service fees
and tax implications, and should consult a tax adviser.
DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE
Valuation of Portfolio Securities. The Fund's investments are valued
each business day using available market quotations or at fair value as
determined by one or more independent pricing services (collectively, the
"Service") approved by the Board. The Service may use available market
quotations, or employ electronic data processing techniques and/or a matrix
system to determine valuations. The Service's procedures are reviewed by
the Fund's officers under the general supervision of the Board. Expenses
and fees, including the management fee (reduced by the expense limitation,
if any), are accrued daily and are taken into account for the purpose of
determining the net asset value of Fund shares.
New York Stock Exchange Closings. The holidays (as observed) on which
the New York Stock Exchange is closed currently are: New Year's Day, Martin
Luther King Jr. Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day,
Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas.
DIVIDENDS, DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
Management believes that the Fund has qualified for the fiscal year
ended November 30, 1998 as a "regulated investment company" under the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"). The Fund intends to
continue to so qualify if such qualification is in the best interests of its
shareholders. Such qualification relieves the Fund of any liability for
Federal income tax to the extent its earnings are distributed in accordance
with applicable provisions of the Code. If the Fund did not qualify as a
regulated investment company, it would be treated for tax purposes as an
ordinary corporation subject to Federal income tax.
The Fund ordinarily declares dividends from its net investment income
on each day the Fund is open for business. Fund shares begin earning income
dividends on the day following the date of purchase. The Fund's earnings
for Saturdays, Sundays and holidays are declared as dividends on the next
business day. Dividends usually are paid on the last business day of each
month and are automatically reinvested in additional Fund shares at net
asset value or, at your option, paid in cash. If you redeem all shares in
your account at any time during the month, all dividends to which you are
entitled will be paid to you along with the proceeds of the redemption. If
you are an omnibus accountholder and indicate in a partial redemption
request that a portion of any accrued dividends to which such account is
entitled belongs to an underlying accountholder who has redeemed all shares
in his or her account, such portion of the accrued dividends will be paid to
you along with the proceeds of the redemption.
If you elect to receive dividends and distributions in cash, and your
dividend or distribution check is returned to the Fund as undeliverable or
remains uncashed for six months, the Fund reserves the right to reinvest
such dividend or distribution and all future dividends and distributions
payable to you in additional Fund shares at net asset value. No interest
will accrue on amounts represented by uncashed distribution or redemption
checks.
Any dividend or distribution paid shortly after your purchase may have
the effect of reducing the aggregate net asset value of the shares below the
cost of your investment. Such a distribution would be a return on
investment in an economic sense although taxable as stated under
"Distributions and Taxes" in the Fund's Prospectus. In addition, the Code
provides that if a shareholder holds Fund shares for six months or less and
has received a capital gain dividend with respect to such shares, any loss
incurred on the sale of such shares will be treated as a long-term capital
loss to the extent of the capital gain dividend received.
Ordinarily, gains and losses realized from portfolio transactions will
be treated as capital gains or losses. However, all or a portion of any
gains realized from the sale or other disposition of certain market discount
bonds will be treated as ordinary income under Section 1276 of the Code. In
addition, all or a portion of the gain realized from engaging in "conversion
transactions" may be treated as ordinary income under Section 1258 of the
Code. "Conversion transactions" are defined to include certain forward,
futures, option and "straddle" transactions, transactions marketed or sold
to produce capital gains or transactions described in Treasury regulations
to be issued in the future.
The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 included constructive sale provisions
that generally apply if the Fund either (1) holds an appreciated financial
position with respect to stock, certain debt obligations, or partnership
interests ("appreciated financial position") and then enters into a short
sale, futures, forward, or offsetting notional principal contract
(collectively, a "Contract") respecting the same or substantially identical
property or (2) holds an appreciated financial position that is a Contract
and then acquires property that is the same as, or substantially identical
to, the underlying property. In each instance, with certain exceptions, the
Fund generally will be taxed as if the appreciated financial position were
sold at its fair market value on the date the Fund enters into the financial
position or acquires the property, respectively. Transactions that are
identified as hedging or straddle transactions under other provisions of the
Code can be subject to the constructive sale provisions.
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
Portfolio securities ordinarily are purchased from and sold to parties
acting as either principal or agent. Newly-issued securities ordinarily are
purchased directly from the issuer or from an underwriter; other purchases
and sales usually are placed with those dealers from which it appears that
the best price or execution is obtained. Usually no brokerage commissions,
as such, are paid by the Fund for such purchases and sales, although the
price paid usually includes an undisclosed compensation to the dealer acting
as agent. The prices paid to underwriters of newly-issued securities
usually include a concession paid by the issuer to the underwriter, and
purchases of after-market securities from dealers ordinarily are executed at
a price between the bid and asked price. No brokerage commissions have been
paid by the Fund to date.
Transactions are allocated to various dealers by the Fund's portfolio
managers in their best judgment. The primary consideration is prompt and
effective execution of orders at the most favorable price. Subject to that
primary consideration, dealers may be selected for research, statistical or
other services to enable the Manager to supplement its own research and
analysis with the views and information of other securities firms and may be
selected based upon their sales of shares of the Fund or other Funds advised
by the Manager or its affiliates.
Research services furnished by brokers through which the Fund effects
securities transactions may be used by the Manager in advising other funds
it advises and, conversely, research services furnished to the Manager by
brokers in connection with other funds the Manager advises may be used by
the Manager in advising the Fund. Although it is not possible to place a
dollar value on these services, it is the opinion of the Manager that the
receipt and study of such services should not reduce the overall expenses of
its research department.
PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
The Fund's current yield for the 30-day period ended November 30, 1998
was ____%. Current yield is computed pursuant to a formula which operates
as follows: The amount of the Fund's expenses accrued for the 30-day period
(net of reimbursements) is subtracted from the amount of the dividends and
interest earned (computed in accordance with regulatory requirements) by the
Fund during the period. That result is then divided by the product of: (a)
the average daily number of shares outstanding during the period that were
entitled to receive dividends, and (b) the net asset value per share on the
last day of the period less any undistributed earned income per share
reasonably expected to be declared as a dividend shortly thereafter. The
quotient is then added to 1, and that sum is raised to the 6th power, after
which 1 is subtracted. The current yield is then arrived at by multiplying
the result by 2.
The Fund's average annual total return for the 1, 5 and 10 year periods
ended November 30, 1998 was ____%, ____% and ____%, respectively. Average
annual total return is calculated by determining the ending redeemable value
of an investment purchased with a hypothetical $1,000 payment made at the
beginning of the period (assuming the reinvestment of dividends and
distributions), dividing by the amount of the initial investment, taking the
"n"th root of the quotient (where "n" is the number of years in the period)
and subtracting 1 from the result.
The Fund's aggregate total return for the period April 6, 1987
(commencement of operations) to November 30, 1998 was _____%. Total return
is calculated by subtracting the amount of the Fund's net asset value per
share at the beginning of a stated period from the net asset value per share
at the end of the period (after giving effect to the reinvestment of
dividends and distributions during the period), and dividing the result by
the net asset value per share at the beginning of the period.
Comparative performance information may be used from time to time in
advertising or marketing the Fund's shares, including data from Lipper
Analytical Services, Inc., Bank Rate MonitorT, Moody's Bond Survey Bond
Index, Lehman Brothers Municipal Bond Index, Salomon Brothers Corporate Bond
Rate-of-Return Index, Bond Buyer's 20-Bond Index and other industry
publications. From time to time, advertising materials for the Fund may
refer to or discuss then-current or past economic conditions, developments
and/or events, actual or proposed tax legislation, or to statistical or
other information concerning trends relating to investment companies, as
compiled by industry associations such as the Investment Company Institute.
From time to time, advertising materials for the Fund also may refer to
Morningstar ratings and related analyses supporting such ratings.
From time to time, advertising material for the Fund may include
statistical data or general discussions about the growth and development of
Dreyfus Retirement Services (in terms of new customers, assets under
management, market share, etc.) and its presence in the defined contribution
plan market and biographical information relating to its portfolio manager,
and may refer to, or include commentary by the portfolio manager relating to
investment strategy, asset growth, current or past business, political,
economic or financial conditions and other matters of general interest to
investors.
INFORMATION ABOUT THE FUND
Each Fund share has one vote, and when issued and paid for in
accordance with the terms of the offering, is fully paid and non-assessable.
Fund shares are of one class and have equal rights as to dividends and in
liquidation. Shares have no preemptive, subscription or conversion rights
and are freely transferable.
The Fund is organized as an unincorporated business trust under the
laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Under Massachusetts law,
shareholders could, under certain circumstances, be held personally liable
for the obligations of the Fund. However, the Fund's Agreement and
Declaration of Trust ("Trust Agreement") disclaims shareholder liability for
acts or obligations of the Fund and requires that notice of such disclaimer
be given in the agreement, obligation or instrument entered into or executed
by the Fund or a Board member. The Trust Agreement provides for
indemnification from the Fund's property for all losses and expenses of any
shareholder held personally liable for the obligations of the Fund. Thus,
the risk of a shareholder incurring financial loss on account of a
shareholder liability is limited to circumstances in which the Fund itself
would be unable to meet its obligations, a possibility which management
believes is remote. Upon payment of any liability incurred by the Fund, the
shareholder paying such liability will be entitled to reimbursement from the
general assets of the Fund. The Fund intends to conduct its operations in a
way so as to avoid, as far as possible, ultimate liability of the
shareholders for liabilities of the Fund.
Unless otherwise required by the 1940 Act, ordinarily it will not be
necessary for the Fund to hold annual meetings of shareholders. As a
result, Fund shareholders may not consider each year the election of Board
members or the appointment of auditors. However, the holders of at least
10% of the shares outstanding and entitled to vote may require the Fund to
hold a special meeting of shareholders for purposes of removing a Board
member from office. Fund shareholders may remove a Board member by the
affirmative vote of two-thirds of the Fund's outstanding voting shares. In
addition, the Board will call a meeting of shareholders for the purpose of
electing Board members if, at any time, less than a majority of the Board
members then holding office have been elected by shareholders.
The Fund is intended to be a long-term investment vehicle and is not
designed to provide investors with a means of speculating on short-term
market movements. A pattern of frequent purchases and exchanges can be
disruptive to efficient portfolio management and, consequently, can be
detrimental to the Fund's performance and its shareholders. Accordingly, if
the Fund's management determines that an investor is following a market-
timing strategy or is otherwise engaging in excessive trading, the Fund,
with or without prior notice, may temporarily or permanently terminate the
availability of Fund Exchanges, or reject in whole or part of any purchase
or exchange request, with respect to such investor's account. Such
investors also may be barred from purchasing other funds in the Dreyfus
Family of Funds. Generally, an investor who makes more than four exchanges
out of the Fund during any calendar year or who makes exchanges that appear
to coincide with a market-timing strategy may be deemed to be engaged in
excessive trading. Accounts under common ownership or control will be
considered as one account for purposes of determining a pattern of excessive
trading. In addition, the Fund may refuse or restrict purchase or exchange
requests by any person or group if, in the judgment of the Fund's
management, the Fund would be unable to invest the money effectively in
accordance with its investment objective and policies or could otherwise be
adversely affected or if the Fund receives or anticipates receiving
simultaneous orders that may significantly affect the Fund (e.g., amounts
equal to 1% or more of the Fund's total assets). If an exchange request is
refused, the Fund will take no other action with respect to the shares until
it receives further instructions from the investor. The Fund may delay
forwarding redemption proceeds for up to seven days if the investor
redeeming shares is engaged in excessive trading or if the amount of the
redemption request otherwise would be disruptive to efficient portfolio
management or would adversely affect the Fund. The Fund's policy on
excessive trading applies to investors who invest in the Fund directly or
through financial intermediaries, but does not apply to the Dreyfus Auto-
Exchange Privilege, to any automatic investment or withdrawal privilege
described herein, or to participants in employer-sponsored retirement plans.
During times of drastic economic or market conditions, the Fund may
suspend Fund Exchanges temporarily without notice and treat exchange
requests based on their separate components--redemption orders with a
simultaneous request to purchase the other fund's shares. In such a case,
the redemption request would be processed at the Fund's next determined net
asset value but the purchase order would be effective only at the net asset
value next determined after the fund being purchased receives the proceeds
of the redemption, which may result in the purchase being delayed.
To offset the relatively higher costs of servicing smaller accounts,
the Fund will charge regular accounts with balances below $2,000 an annual
fee of $12. The valuation of accounts and the deductions are expected to
take place during the last four months of each year. The fee will be waived
for any investor whose aggregate Dreyfus mutual fund investments total at
least $25,000, and will not apply to IRA accounts or to accounts
participating in automatic investment programs or opened through a
securities dealer, bank or other financial institution, or to other
fiduciary accounts.
The Fund sends annual and semi-annual financial statements to all its
shareholders.
COUNSEL AND INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
Stroock & Stroock & Lavan LLP, 180 Maiden Lane, New York, New York
10038-4982, as counsel for the Fund, has rendered its opinion as to certain
legal matters regarding the due authorization and valid issuance of the
shares being sold pursuant to the Fund's Prospectus.
Ernst & Young LLP, 787 Seventh Avenue, New York, New York 10019,
independent auditors, have been selected as independent auditors of the
Fund.
C-1
DREYFUS SHORT-INTERMEDIATE GOVERNMENT FUND
PART C. OTHER INFORMATION
_________________________
Item 23. Exhibits
___________________
(a) Registrant's Declaration of Trust and Articles of Amendment are
incorporated by reference to Exhibit (1) of Post-Effective
Amendment No. 9 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed
on January 27, 1995.
(b) Registrant's By-Laws as amended, are incorporated by reference to
Exhibit (2) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 9 to the Registration
Statement on Form N-1A, filed on January 27, 1995.
(c) Specimen certificate for the Registrant's securities is
incorporated by reference to Exhibit (4) of Pre-Effective
Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed
on February 20, 1987.
(d) Management Agreement is incorporated by reference to Exhibit (5)
of Post-Effective Amendment No. 9 to the Registration Statement on
Form N-1A, filed on January 27, 1995.
(e) Distribution Agreement is incorporated by reference to Exhibit (6)
of Post-Effective Amendment No. 9 to the Registration Statement on
Form N-1A, filed on January 27, 1995. Forms of Service Agreement
are incorporated by reference to Exhibit 6(b) of Post-Effective
Amendment No. 9 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed
on January 27, 1995.
(g) Amended and Restated Custody Agreement is incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 8(a) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 9 to the
Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on January 27, 1995.
(h) Shareholder Services Plan is incorporated by reference to Exhibit
9 of Post-Effective Amendment No. 9 to the Registration Statement
on Form N-1A, filed on January 27, 1995.
(i) Opinion and consent of Registrant's counsel is incorporated by
reference to Exhibit (10) of Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the
Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on February 20, 1987.
(j) Consent of Independent Auditors.
(n) Financial Data Schedule.
Item 23. Exhibits. - List (continued)
_______ _____________________________
Other Exhibits
______________
(a) Powers of Attorney of the Directors and officers.
(b) Certificate of Secretary is incorporated by reference to
Other Exhibits (b) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 5 to
the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on
February 12, 1991.
Item 24. Persons Controlled by or under Common Control with Registrant.
_______ ______________________________________________________________
Not Applicable
Item 25. Indemnification
_______ _______________
Reference is made to Article EIGHTH of the Registrant's
Agreement and Declaration of Trust previously filed as Exhibit 1 to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 9 to the Registration Statement on
Form N-1A on January 27, 1995. The application of these provisions
is limited by Article 10 of the Registrant's By-Laws previously
filed as Exhibit 2 to Post-Effective Amendment No. 9 to the
Registration Statement on Form N-1A on January 27, 1995 and by the
following undertaking set forth in the rules promulgated by the
Securities and Exchange Commission: Insofar as indemnification for
liabilities arising under the Securities Act of 1933 may be
permitted to trustees, officers and controlling persons of the
registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the
registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities
and Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public
policy as expressed in such Act and is, therefore, unenforceable.
Item 26. Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser.
_______ ____________________________________________________
The Dreyfus Corporation ("Dreyfus") and subsidiary companies
comprise a financial service organization whose business
consists primarily of providing investment management services
as the investment adviser and manager for sponsored investment
companies registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940
and as an investment adviser to institutional and individual
accounts. Dreyfus also serves as sub-investment adviser to
and/or administrator of other investment companies. Dreyfus
Service Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Dreyfus,
serves primarily as a registered broker-dealer of shares of
investment companies sponsored by Dreyfus and of other
investment companies for which Dreyfus acts as investment
adviser, sub-investment adviser or administrator. Dreyfus
Management, Inc., another wholly-owned subsidiary, provides
investment management services to various pension plans,
institutions and individuals.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
ITEM 26. Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser (continued)
Officers and Directors of Investment Adviser
<S> <C> <C> <C>
Name and Position
With Dreyfus Other Businesses Position Held Dates
Christopher M. Condron Mellon Preferred Director 3/96 - 11/96
Chairman of the Board and Capital Corporation*
Chief Executive Officer
TBCAM Holdings, Inc.* President 10/97 - 6/98
Chairman 10/97 - 6/98
The Boston Company Chairman 1/98 - 6/98
Asset Management, LLC* President 1/98 - 6/98
The Boston Company President 9/95 - 1/98
Asset Management, Inc.* Chairman 4/95 - 1/98
Chief Executive Officer 4/95 - 4/97
Pareto Partners Partner Representative 11/95 - 5/97
271 Regent Street
London, England W1R 8PP
Franklin Portfolio Holdings, Inc.* Director 1/97 - Present
Franklin Portfolio
Associates Trust* Trustee 9/95 - 1/97
Certus Asset Advisors Corp.**
Director 6/95 - Present
The Boston Company of Director 6/95 - 4/96
Southern California Chief Executive Officer 6/95 - 4/96
Los Angeles, CA
Mellon Capital Management Director 5/95 - Present
Corporation***
Mellon Bond Associates, LLP+ Executive Committee 1/98 - Present
Member
Mellon Bond Associates+ Trustee 5/95 -1/98
Mellon Equity Associates, LLP+ Executive Committee 1/98 - Present
Member
Mellon Equity Associates+ Trustee 5/95 - 1/98
Boston Safe Advisors, Inc.* Director 5/95 - Present
President 5/95 - Present
Access Capital Strategies Corp. Director 5/95 - 1/97
124 Mount Auburn Street
Suite 200 North
Cambridge, MA 02138
Mellon Bank, N.A. + Chief Operating Officer 3/98 - Present
President 3/98 - Present
Vice Chairman 11/94 - Present
Christopher M. Condron Mellon Bank Corporation+ Chief Operating Officer 1/99 - Present
Chairman and Chief President 1/99 - Present
Executive Director 1/98 - Present
Officer (Continued) Vice Chairman 11/94 - 1/99
The Boston Company Financial Director 4/94- 8/96
Services, Inc.* President 4/94 - 8/96
The Boston Company, Inc.* Vice Chairman 1/94 - Present
Director 5/93 - Present
Laurel Capital Advisors, LLP+ Exec. Committee 1/98 - Present
Member
Laurel Capital Advisors+ Trustee 10/93 - 1/98
Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Chairman 3/93 - 2/96
Company of CA Chief Executive Officer 6/93 - 2/96
Los Angeles, CA Director 6/89 - 2/96
MY, Inc.* President 9/91 - 3/96
Director 9/91 - 3/96
Reco, Inc.* President 8/91 - 11/96
Director 8/91 - 11/96
Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Director 6/89 - 2/96
Company of NY
New York, NY
Boston Safe Deposit and Trust President 9/89 - 6/96
Company* Director 5/93 -Present
The Boston Company Financial President 6/89 - Present
Strategies, Inc. * Director 6/89 - Present
The Boston Company Financial President 6/89 - 1/97
Strategies Group, Inc. * Director 6/89- 1/97
Mandell L. Berman Self-Employed Real Estate Consultant, 11/74 - Present
Director 29100 Northwestern Highway Residential Builder and
Suite 370 Private Investor
Southfield, MI 48034
Burton C. Borgelt DeVlieg Bullard, Inc. Director 1/93 - Present
Director 1 Gorham Island
Westport, CT 06880
Mellon Bank Corporation+ Director 6/91 - Present
Mellon Bank, N.A. + Director 6/91 - Present
Dentsply International, Inc. Director 2/81 - Present
570 West College Avenue Chief Executive Officer 2/81 - 12/96
York, PA Chairman 3/89 - 1/96
Stephen E. Canter Dreyfus Investment Chairman of the Board 1/97 - Present
President, Chief Operating Advisors, Inc.++ Director 5/95 - Present
Officer, Chief Investment President 5/95 - Present
Officer, and Director
Founders Asset Management, LLC Acting Chief Executive 7/98 - 12/98
2930 East Third Ave. Officer
Denver, CO 80206
The Dreyfus Trust Company+++ Director 6/95 - Present
Steven G. Elliott Mellon Bank Corporation+ Senior Vice Chairman 1/99 - Present
Director Chief Financial Officer 1/90 - Present
Vice Chairman 6/92 - 1/99
Treasurer 1/90 - 5/98
Mellon Bank, N.A.+ Senior Vice Chairman 3/98 - Present
Vice Chairman 6/92 - 3/98
Chief Financial Officer 1/90 - Present
Mellon EFT Services Corporation Director 10/98 - Present
Mellon Bank Center, 8th Floor
1735 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Mellon Financial Services Director 1/96 - Present
Corporation #1 Vice President 1/96 - Present
Mellon Bank Center, 8th Floor
1735 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Boston Group Holdings, Inc.* Vice President 5/93 - Present
APT Holdings Corporation Treasurer 12/87 - Present
Pike Creek Operations Center
4500 New Linden Hill Road
Wilmington, DE 19808
Allomon Corporation Director 12/87 - Present
Two Mellon Bank Center
Pittsburgh, PA 15259
Collection Services Corporation Controller 10/90 - Present
500 Grant Street Director 9/88 - Present
Pittsburgh, PA 15258 Vice President 9/88 - Present
Treasurer 9/88 - Present
Mellon Financial Company+ Principal Exec. Officer 1/88 - Present
Chief Financial Officer 8/87 - Present
Director 8/87 - Present
President 8/87 - Present
Mellon Overseas Investments Director 4/88 - Present
Corporation+ Chairman 7/89 - 11/97
President 4/88 - 11/97
Chief Executive Officer 4/88 - 11/97
Mellon International Investment Director 9/89 - 8/97
Corporation+
Mellon Financial Services Treasurer 12/87 - Present
Corporation # 5+
Lawrence S. Kash Dreyfus Investment Director 4/97 - Present
Vice Chairman Advisors, Inc.++
And Director
Dreyfus Brokerage Services, Inc. Chairman 11/97 - Present
401 North Maple Ave. Chief Executive Officer 11/97 - Present
Beverly Hills, CA
Dreyfus Service Corporation++ Director 1/95 - Present
President 9/96 - Present
Dreyfus Precious Metals, Inc.++ + Director 3/96 - 12/98
President 10/96 - 12/98
Dreyfus Service Director 12/94 - Present
Organization, Inc.++ President 1/97 - Present
Executive Vice President 12/94 - 1/97
Seven Six Seven Agency, Inc. ++ Director 1/97 - Present
Dreyfus Insurance Agency of Chairman 5/97 - Present
Massachusetts, Inc.++++ President 5/97 - Present
Director 5/97 - Present
The Dreyfus Trust Company+++ Chairman 1/97 - Present
President 2/97 - Present
Chief Executive Officer 2/97 - Present
Director 12/94 - Present
The Dreyfus Consumer Credit Chairman 5/97 - Present
Corporation++ President 5/97 - Present
Director 12/94 - Present
The Boston Company Advisors* Chairman 8/93 - 11/95
The Boston Company Advisors, Chairman 12/95 - Present
Inc. Chief Executive Officer 12/95 - Present
Wilmington, DE President 12/95 - Present
Cornice Acquisition Board of Managers 12/97 - Present
Company, LLC
Denver, CO
The Boston Company, Inc.* Director 5/93 - Present
President 5/93 - Present
Mellon Bank, N.A.+ Executive Vice President 2/92 - Present
Laurel Capital Advisors, LLP+ President 12/91 - Present
Executive Committee 12/91 - Present
Member
Boston Group Holdings, Inc.* Director 5/93 - Present
President 5/93 - Present
Martin G. McGuinn Mellon Bank Corporation+ Chairman 1/99 - Present
Director Chief Executive Officer 1/99 - Present
Director 1/98 - Present
Vice Chairman 1/90 - 1/99
Martin G. McGuinn Mellon Bank, N. A. + Chairman 3/98 - Present
Director (Continued) Chief Executive Officer 3/98 - Present
Director 1/98 - Present
Vice Chairman 1/90 - 1/99
Mellon Leasing Corporation+ Vice Chairman 12/96 - Present
Mellon Bank (DE) National Director 4/89 - 12/98
Association
Wilmington, DE
Mellon Bank (MD) National Director 1/96 - 4/98
Association
Rockville, Maryland
Mellon Financial Vice President 9/86 - 10/97
Corporation (MD)
Rockville, Maryland
J. David Officer Dreyfus Service Corporation++ Executive Vice President 5/98 - Present
Vice Chairman
And Director Dreyfus Insurance Agency of Director 5/98 - Present
Massachusetts, Inc.++++
Seven Six Seven Agency, Inc.++ Director 10/98 - Present
Mellon Residential Funding Corp. + Director 4/97 - Present
Mellon Trust of Florida, N.A. Director 8/97 - Present
2875 Northeast 191st Street
North Miami Beach, FL 33180
Mellon Bank, NA+ Executive Vice President 7/96 - Present
The Boston Company, Inc.* Vice Chairman 1/97 - Present
Director 7/96 - Present
Mellon Preferred Capital Director 11/96 - Present
Corporation*
RECO, Inc.* President 11/96 - Present
Director 11/96 - Present
The Boston Company Financial President 8/96 - Present
Services, Inc.* Director 8/96 - Present
Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Director
Company* President 7/96 - Present
Executive Vice President 7/96 - 1/99
1/91 - 7/96
Mellon Trust of New York Director
1301 Avenue of the Americas 6/96 - Present
New York, NY 10019
Mellon Trust of California Director 6/96 - Present
400 South Hope Street
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90071
J. David Officer Mellon Bank, N.A.+ Executive Vice President 2/94 - Present
Vice Chairman and
Director (Continued) Mellon United National Bank Director 3/98 - Present
1399 SW 1st Ave., Suite 400
Miami, Florida
Boston Group Holdings, Inc.* Director 12/97 - Present
Dreyfus Financial Services Corp. + Director 9/96 - Present
Dreyfus Investment Services Director 4/96 - Present
Corporation+
Richard W. Sabo Founders Asset Management LLC President 12/98 - Present
Director 2930 East Third Avenue Chief Executive Officer 12/98 - Present
Denver, CO. 80206
Prudential Securities Senior Vice President 07/91 - 11/98
New York, NY Regional Director 07/91 - 11/98
Richard F. Syron American Stock Exchange Chairman 4/94 - Present
Director 86 Trinity Place Chief Executive Officer 4/94 - Present
New York, NY 10006
Thomas F. Eggers Dreyfus Service Corporation++ Executive Vice President 4/96 - Present
Vice Chairman - Institutional Director 9/96 - Present
Ronald P. O'Hanley Franklin Portfolio Holdings, Inc.* Director 3/97 - Present
Vice Chairman
TBCAM Holdings, Inc.* Chairman 6/98 - Present
Director 10/97 - Present
The Boston Company Asset Chairman 6/98 - Present
Management, LLC* Director 1/98 - 6/98
The Boston Company Asset Director 2/97 - 12/97
Management, Inc. *
Boston Safe Advisors, Inc. * Chairman 6/97 - Present
Director 2/97 - Present
Pareto Partners Partner Representative 5/97 - Present
271 Regent Street
London, England W1R 8PP
Mellon Capital Management Director 5/97 -Present
Corporation***
Certus Asset Advisors Corp.** Director 2/97 - Present
Mellon Bond Associates+ Trustee 2/97 - Present
Chairman 2/97 - Present
Mellon Equity Associates+ Trustee 2/97 - Present
Chairman 2/97 - Present
Mellon-France Corporation+ Director 3/97 - Present
Laurel Capital Advisors+ Trustee 3/97 - Present
Ronald P. O'Hanley McKinsey & Company, Inc. Partner 8/86 - 2/97
Vice Chairman (Continued) Boston, MA
Mark Jacobs Dreyfus Investment Director 4/97 - Present
General Counsel, Advisors, Inc.++ Secretary 10/77 - 7/98
Vice President, and
Secretary The Dreyfus Trust Company+++ Director 3/96 - Present
The TruePenny Corporation++ President 10/98 - Present
Director 3/96 - Present
Lion Management, Inc.++ Director 1/88 - 10/96
Vice President 1/88 - 10/96
Secretary 1/88 - 10/96
The Dreyfus Consumer Credit Secretary 4/83 - 3/96
Corporation++
Dreyfus Service Director 3/97 - Present
Organization, Inc.++ Assistant Secretary 4/83 -3/96
Major Trading Corporation++ Assistant Secretary 5/81 - 8/96
William H. Maresca The Dreyfus Trust Company+++ Director 3/97 - Present
Controller
Dreyfus Service Corporation++ Chief Financial Officer 12/98 - Present
Dreyfus Consumer Credit Corp.++ Treasurer 10/98 - Present
Dreyfus Investment Treasurer 10/98 - Present
Advisors, Inc. ++
Dreyfus-Lincoln, Inc. Vice President 10/98 - Present
4500 New Linden Hill Road
Wilmington, DE 19808
The TruePenny Corporation++ Vice President 10/98 - Present
Dreyfus Precious Metals, Inc.+++ Treasurer 10/98 - 12/98
The Trotwood Corporation++ Vice President 10/98 - Present
Trotwood Hunters Corporation++ Vice President 10/98 - Present
Trotwood Hunters Site A Corp. ++ Vice President 10/98 - Present
Dreyfus Transfer, Inc. Chief Financial Officer 5/98 - Present
One American Express Plaza,
Providence, RI 02903
Dreyfus Service Assistant Treasurer 3/93 - Present
Organization, Inc.++
Dreyfus Insurance Agency of Assistant Treasurer 5/98 - Present
Massachusetts, Inc.++++
William T. Sandalls, Jr. Dreyfus Transfer, Inc. Chairman 2/97 - Present
Executive Vice President One American Express Plaza,
Providence, RI 02903
William T. Sandalls, Jr. Dreyfus Service Corporation++ Director 1/96 - Present
Executive Vice President Treasurer 1/96 - 2/97
(Continued) Executive Vice President 2/97 - Present
Chief Financial Officer 2/97 - 12/98
Dreyfus Investment Director 1/96 - Present
Advisors, Inc.++ Treasurer 1/96 - 10/98
Dreyfus-Lincoln, Inc. Director 12/96 - Present
4500 New Linden Hill Road President 1/97 - Present
Wilmington, DE 19808
Dreyfus Acquisition Corporation++ Director VP and CFO 1/96 - 8/96
Vice President 1/96 - 8/96
Chief Financial Officer 1/96 - 8/96
Lion Management, Inc.++ Director 1/96 - 10/96
President 1/96 - 10/96
Seven Six Seven Agency, Inc.++ Director 1/96 - 10/98
Treasurer 10/96 - 10/98
The Dreyfus Consumer Director 1/96 - Present
Credit Corp.++ Vice President 1/96 - Present
Treasurer 1/97 - 10/98
Dreyfus Partnership President 1/97 - 6/97
Management, Inc.++ Director 1/96 - 6/97
Dreyfus Service Organization, Director 1/96 - 6/97
Inc.++ Executive Vice President 1/96 - 6/97
Treasurer 10/96 - Present
Dreyfus Insurance Agency of Director 5/97 - Present
Massachusetts, Inc.++++ Treasurer 5/97 - Present
Executive Vice President 5/97 - Present
Major Trading Corporation++ Director 1/96 - 8/96
Treasurer 1/96 - 8/96
The Dreyfus Trust Company+++ Director 1/96 - 4/97
Treasurer 1/96 - 4/97
Chief Financial Officer 1/96 - 4/97
Dreyfus Personal Director 1/96 - 4/97
Management, Inc.++ Treasurer 1/96 - 4/97
Patrice M. Kozlowski None
Vice President - Corporate
Communications
Mary Beth Leibig None
Vice President -
Human Resources
Andrew S. Wasser Mellon Bank Corporation+ Vice President 1/95 - Present
Vice President -
Information Systems
Theodore A. Schachar Dreyfus Service Corporation++ Vice President -Tax 10/96 - Present
Vice President - Tax
Dreyfus Investment Advisors, Inc.++ Vice President - Tax 10/96 - Present
Dreyfus Precious Metals, Inc. +++ Vice President - Tax 10/96 - 12/98
Dreyfus Service Organization, Inc.++ Vice President - Tax 10/96 - Present
Wendy Strutt None
Vice President
Richard Terres None
Vice President
James Bitetto The TruePenny Corporation++ Secretary 9/98 - Present
Assistant Secretary
Dreyfus Service Corporation++ Assistant Secretary 8/98 - Present
Dreyfus Investment Assistant Secretary 7/98 - Present
Advisors, Inc.++
Dreyfus Service Assistant Secretary 7/98 - Present
Organization, Inc.++
Steven F. Newman Dreyfus Transfer, Inc. Vice President 2/97 - Present
Assistant Secretary One American Express Plaza Director 2/97 - Present
Providence, RI 02903 Secretary 2/97 - Present
Dreyfus Service Secretary 7/98 - Present
Organization, Inc.++ Assistant Secretary 5/98 - 7/98
_______________________________
* The address of the business so indicated is One Boston Place, Boston,
Massachusetts, 02108.
** The address of the business so indicated is One Bush Street, Suite 450, San
Francisco, California 94104.
*** The address of the business so indicated is 595 Market Street, Suite 3000,
San Francisco, California 94105.
+ The address of the business so indicated is One Mellon Bank Center,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15258.
++ The address of the business so indicated is 200 Park Avenue, New York, New
York 10166.
+++ The address of the business so indicated is 144 Glenn Curtiss Boulevard,
Uniondale, New York 11556-0144.
++++The address of the business so indicated is 53 State Street, Boston,
Massachusetts 02109
</TABLE>
Item 27. Principal Underwriters
________ ______________________
(a) Other investment companies for which Registrant's principal
underwriter (exclusive distributor) acts as principal underwriter or
exclusive distributor:
1) Comstock Partners Funds, Inc.
2) Dreyfus A Bonds Plus, Inc.
3) Dreyfus Appreciation Fund, Inc.
4) Dreyfus Asset Allocation Fund, Inc.
5) Dreyfus Balanced Fund, Inc.
6) Dreyfus BASIC GNMA Fund
7) Dreyfus BASIC Money Market Fund, Inc.
8) Dreyfus BASIC Municipal Fund, Inc.
9) Dreyfus BASIC U.S. Government Money Market Fund
10) Dreyfus California Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
11) Dreyfus California Tax Exempt Bond Fund, Inc.
12) Dreyfus California Tax Exempt Money Market Fund
13) Dreyfus Cash Management
14) Dreyfus Cash Management Plus, Inc.
15) Dreyfus Connecticut Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
16) Dreyfus Connecticut Municipal Money Market Fund, Inc.
17) Dreyfus Florida Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
18) Dreyfus Florida Municipal Money Market Fund
19) The Dreyfus Fund Incorporated
20) Dreyfus Global Bond Fund, Inc.
21) Dreyfus Global Growth Fund
22) Dreyfus GNMA Fund, Inc.
23) Dreyfus Government Cash Management Funds
24) Dreyfus Growth and Income Fund, Inc.
25) Dreyfus Growth and Value Funds, Inc.
26) Dreyfus Growth Opportunity Fund, Inc.
27) Dreyfus Debt and Equity Funds
28) Dreyfus Index Funds, Inc.
29) Dreyfus Institutional Money Market Fund
30) Dreyfus Institutional Preferred Money Market Fund
31) Dreyfus Institutional Short Term Treasury Fund
32) Dreyfus Insured Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
33) Dreyfus Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
34) Dreyfus International Funds, Inc.
35) Dreyfus Investment Grade Bond Funds, Inc.
36) Dreyfus Investment Portfolios
37) The Dreyfus/Laurel Funds, Inc.
38) The Dreyfus/Laurel Funds Trust
39) The Dreyfus/Laurel Tax-Free Municipal Funds
40) Dreyfus LifeTime Portfolios, Inc.
41) Dreyfus Liquid Assets, Inc.
42) Dreyfus Massachusetts Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
43) Dreyfus Massachusetts Municipal Money Market Fund
44) Dreyfus Massachusetts Tax Exempt Bond Fund
45) Dreyfus MidCap Index Fund
46) Dreyfus Money Market Instruments, Inc.
47) Dreyfus Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
48) Dreyfus Municipal Cash Management Plus
49) Dreyfus Municipal Money Market Fund, Inc.
50) Dreyfus New Jersey Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
51) Dreyfus New Jersey Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
52) Dreyfus New Jersey Municipal Money Market Fund, Inc.
53) Dreyfus New Leaders Fund, Inc.
54) Dreyfus New York Insured Tax Exempt Bond Fund
55) Dreyfus New York Municipal Cash Management
56) Dreyfus New York Tax Exempt Bond Fund, Inc.
57) Dreyfus New York Tax Exempt Intermediate Bond Fund
58) Dreyfus New York Tax Exempt Money Market Fund
59) Dreyfus U.S. Treasury Intermediate Term Fund
60) Dreyfus U.S. Treasury Long Term Fund
61) Dreyfus 100% U.S. Treasury Money Market Fund
62) Dreyfus U.S. Treasury Short Term Fund
63) Dreyfus Pennsylvania Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
64) Dreyfus Pennsylvania Municipal Money Market Fund
65) Dreyfus Premier California Municipal Bond Fund
66) Dreyfus Premier Equity Funds, Inc.
67) Dreyfus Premier International Funds, Inc.
68) Dreyfus Premier GNMA Fund
69) Dreyfus Premier Worldwide Growth Fund, Inc.
70) Dreyfus Premier Municipal Bond Fund
71) Dreyfus Premier New York Municipal Bond Fund
72) Dreyfus Premier State Municipal Bond Fund
73) Dreyfus Premier Value Fund
74) Dreyfus Short-Intermediate Government Fund
75) Dreyfus Short-Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
76) The Dreyfus Socially Responsible Growth Fund, Inc.
77) Dreyfus Stock Index Fund, Inc.
78) Dreyfus Tax Exempt Cash Management
79) The Dreyfus Third Century Fund, Inc.
80) Dreyfus Treasury Cash Management
81) Dreyfus Treasury Prime Cash Management
82) Dreyfus Variable Investment Fund
83) Dreyfus Worldwide Dollar Money Market Fund, Inc.
84) Founders Funds, Inc.
85) General California Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
86) General California Municipal Money Market Fund
87) General Government Securities Money Market Fund, Inc.
88) General Money Market Fund, Inc.
89) General Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
90) General Municipal Money Market Funds, Inc.
91) General New York Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
92) General New York Municipal Money Market Fund
(b)
Positions and
Name and principal Positions and offices with offices with
business address the Distributor Registrant
__________________ ___________________________ _____________
Marie E. Connolly+ Director, President, Chief President and
Executive Officer and Chief Treasurer
Compliance Officer
Joseph F. Tower, III+ Director, Senior Vice President, Vice President
Treasurer and Chief Financial and Assistant
Officer Treasurer
Mary A. Nelson+ Vice President Vice President
and Assistant
Treasurer
Jean M. O'Leary+ Assistant Vice President, None
Assistant Secretary and
Assistant Clerk
William J. Nutt+ Chairman of the Board None
Michael S. Petrucelli++ Senior Vice President Vice President,
Assistant Treasurer
and Assistant
Secretary
Patrick W. McKeon+ Vice President None
Joseph A. Vignone+ Vice President None
________________________________
+ Principal business address is 60 State Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.
++ Principal business address is 200 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10166.
Item 28. Location of Accounts and Records
_______ ________________________________
1. First Data Investor Services Group, Inc.,
a subsidiary of First Data Corporation
P.O. Box 9671
Providence, Rhode Island 02940-9671
2. Mellon Bank, N.A.
One Mellon Bank Center
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15258
3. Dreyfus Transfer, Inc.
P.O. Box 9671
Providence, Rhode Island 02940-9671
4. The Dreyfus Corporation
200 Park Avenue
New York, New York 10166
Item 29. Management Services
_______ ___________________
Not Applicable
Item 30. Undertakings
_______ ____________
None
SIGNATURES
____________
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant certifies that it meets all
of the requirements for effectiveness of this Amendment to the Registration
Statement pursuant to Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933 and has
duly caused this Amendment to the Registration Statement to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of New
York, and State of New York on the 27th day of July, 1998.
Dreyfus Short-Intermediate Government Fund
BY: /s/ Marie E. Connolly*
________________________________
Marie E. Connolly, PRESIDENT
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, this Amendment to the Registration Statement
has been signed below by the following persons in the capacities and on the
dates indicated.
Signatures Title Date
__________________________ _______________________________
_________
/s/Marie E. Connolly*
President and Treasurer 01/29/99
______________________________ (Principal Executive
Marie E. Connolly and Financial Officer)
/s/Joseph F. Tower, III* Vice President and
01/29/99
______________________________ Assistant Treasurer (Principal
Joseph F. Tower, III
Accounting Officer
/s/Joseph S. DiMartino* Chairman of the Board
01/29/99
______________________________
Joseph S. DiMartino
/s/Lucy Wilson Benson* Trustee
01/29/99
______________________________
Lucy Wilson Benson
/s/David W. Burke* Trustee
01/29/99
______________________________
David W. Burke
/s/Martin D. Fife* Trustee
01/29/99
______________________________
Martin D. Fife
/s/Whitney I. Gerard* Trustee
01/29/99
______________________________
Whitney I. Gerard
/s/Arthur A. Hartman* Trustee
01/29/99
______________________________
Arthur A. Hartman
/s/George L. Perry* Trustee
01/29/99
______________________________
George L. Perry
/s/Paul D. Wolfowitz* Trustee
01/29/99
______________________________
Paul D. Wolfowitz
*BY: /s/ Stephanie D. Pierce
_______________________
Stephanie D. Pierce
Attorney-in-Fact
EXHIBIT INDEX
Exhibits
(j) Consent of Independent Auditors
(n) Financial Data Schedule
Other Exhibits
Powers of Attorney
CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
We consent to the reference to our firm under the captions "Financial
Highlights" and "Counsel and Independent Auditors" and to the use of our
report dated January 11, 1999, which is incorporated by reference, in this
Registration Statement (Form N-1A 33-9634) of Dreyfus Short-Intermediate
Government Fund.
ERNST & YOUNG LLP
New York, New York
January 28, 1999
<TABLE> <S> <C>
<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0000804887
<NAME> DREYFUS SHORT-INTERMEDIATE GOVERNMENT FUND
<MULTIPLIER> 1000
<S> <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE> 12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END> NOV-30-1998
<PERIOD-END> NOV-30-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST> 536975
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE> 534754
<RECEIVABLES> 140133
<ASSETS-OTHER> 25
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS> 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS> 674912
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES> 175532
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT> 0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES> 11666
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES> 187198
<SENIOR-EQUITY> 0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON> 524501
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK> 45066
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR> 45134
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT> 31
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII> 0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS> (34596)
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS> 0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC> (2222)
<NET-ASSETS> 487714
<DIVIDEND-INCOME> 0
<INTEREST-INCOME> 35964
<OTHER-INCOME> 0
<EXPENSES-NET> 3325
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME> 32639
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT> 1957
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT> (1582)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS> 33014
<EQUALIZATION> 0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME> (32804)
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS> 0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER> 0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD> 14998
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED> (17513)
<SHARES-REINVESTED> 2447
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS> (458)
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR> 197
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR> (36553)
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR> 0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR> 0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES> 2381
<INTEREST-EXPENSE> 5
<GROSS-EXPENSE> 3325
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS> 476289
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN> 10.82
<PER-SHARE-NII> .74
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC> .01
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND> (.75)
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS> .00
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL> .00
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END> 10.82
<EXPENSE-RATIO> .007
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING> 000
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE> .000
</TABLE>
POWER OF ATTORNEY
The undersigned hereby constitute and appoint Margaret W. Chambers,
Marie E. Connolly, Christopher J. Kelley, Kathleen K. Morrisey, Michael S.
Petrucelli, Stephanie Pierce and Elba Vasquez, and each of them, with full
power to act without the other, his or her true and lawful attorney-in-fact
and agent, with full power of substitution and resubstitution, for him or
her, and in his or her name, place and stead, in any and all capacities
(until revoked in writing) to sign any and all amendments to the
Registration Statement of The Dreyfus Short-Intermediate Government Fund
(including post-effective amendments and amendments thereto), and to file
the same, with all exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection
therewith, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, granting unto said
attorneys-in-fact and agents, and each of them, full power and authority to
do and perform each and every act and thing ratifying and confirming all
that said attorneys-in-fact and agents or any of them, or their or his or
her substitute or substitutes, may lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue
hereof.
/s/ Joseph S. DiMartino June 15, 1998
Joseph S. DiMartino
/s/ Lucy Wilson Benson June 15, 1998
Lucy Wilson Benson
/s/ David W. Burke June 15, 1998
David W. Burke
/s/ Martin D. Fife June 15, 1998
Martin D. Fife
/s/ Whitney I. Gerard June 15, 1998
Whitney I. Gerard
/s/ Robert R. Glauber June 15, 1998
Robert R. Glauber
/s/ Arthur A. Hartman June 15, 1998
Arthur A. Hartman
/s/ George L. Perry June 15, 1998
George L. Perry
/s/ Paul D. Wolfowitz June 15, 1998
Paul D. Wolfowitz