EXECUTIVE INVESTORS TRUST
485BPOS, 2000-12-18
Previous: GABELLI FUNDS INC ET AL, SC 13D, 2000-12-18
Next: EXECUTIVE INVESTORS TRUST, 485BPOS, EX-99.23(J)(I), 2000-12-18




    As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on December 18, 2000
                                                      1933 Act File No. 33-10648
                                                      1940 Act File No. 811-4927

                       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. 25                      [X]

                                     and/or

         REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
                             Amendment No. 25 [ X ]

                            EXECUTIVE INVESTORS TRUST
               (Exact name of Registrant as specified in charter)

                                 95 Wall Street
                            New York, New York 10005
               (Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)
      (Registrant's Telephone Number, Including Area Code): (212) 858-8000

                               Ms. Concetta Durso
                          Secretary and Vice President

                           First Investors Series Fund
                                 95 Wall Street

                            New York, New York 10005
                     (Name and Address of Agent for Service)

                                    Copy to:
                              Robert J. Zutz, Esq.
                           Kirkpatrick & Lockhart LLP
                          1800 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
                             Washington, D.C. 20036

It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box)
        [X]  immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
        [ ]  on (date) pursuant to paragraph (b)
        [ ]  60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
        [ ]  on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
        [ ]  75 days after  filing  pursuant to  paragraph (a)(2)
        [ ]  on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of Rule 485.

If appropriate, check the following box:
        [ ] This post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a
            previously filed post-effective amendment.


<PAGE>


                            EXECUTIVE INVESTORS TRUST

                       CONTENTS OF REGISTRATION STATEMENT

This registration document is comprised of the following:

        Cover Sheet

        Contents of Registration Statement

        Prospectus for the Executive Investors Trust

        Statement of Additional Information for the Executive Investors Trust

        Part C of Form N-1A

        Signature Page

        Exhibits


<PAGE>

[FIRST INVESTORS LOGO]

INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II

         The Securities and Exchange  Commission has not approved or disapproved
these securities or passed upon the accuracy or adequacy of this prospectus. Any
representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

                THE DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS IS DECEMBER 18, 2000





<PAGE>


                                    CONTENTS

OVERVIEW OF THE INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II

|X|  What is the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II?
| |  Objective
| |  Primary Investment Strategies
| |  Primary Risks
|X|  Who should  consider  buying the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II?
|X|  How has the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II performed?
|X|  What are the fees and expenses of the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II?

THE INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II IN DETAIL

|X| What are the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II's  objective,  principal  investment
    strategies and principal risks?
|X| Who manages the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II?

BUYING AND SELLING SHARES

How and when does the Fund price its shares?
How do I buy shares?
Which class of shares is best for me?
How do I sell shares?
Can I exchange my shares for the shares of other First Investors Funds?

ACCOUNT POLICIES

What about dividends and capital gain distributions?
What about taxes?
How do I obtain a complete explanation of all account privileges and policies?

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS


                                       2
<PAGE>


                   OVERVIEW OF THE INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II

                     What is the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II?

Objective:       The Fund seeks a high level of  interest  income that is exempt
                 from federal  income tax and is not a tax  preference  item for
                 purposes of the Alternative Minimum Tax ("AMT").

Primary
Investment
Strategies:      The  Fund  invests  in  municipal  bonds  and  other  municipal
                 securities  (collectively  "Municipal  Securities"),  that  pay
                 interest that is exempt from federal income tax,  including the
                 AMT.  The Fund invests  primarily  in municipal  bonds that are
                 insured  as to timely  payment of  interest  and  principal  by
                 independent  insurance  companies  that  are  rated  in the top
                 rating category by a nationally  recognized  statistical rating
                 organization,   such  as  Moody's   Investors   Service,   Inc.
                 ("Moody's"). The Fund generally invests in long-term bonds with
                 maturities of fifteen years or more.

Primary Risks:   The most significant risk of investing in  the Fund is interest
                 rate risk. As with other bonds,  the market values of municipal
                 bonds fluctuate with changes in interest  rates.  When interest
                 rates rise,  municipal bonds tend to decline in price, and when
                 interest  rates  fall,  they  tend to  increase  in  price.  In
                 general,  long-term bonds pay higher  interest  rates,  but are
                 more volatile in price than short- or intermediate-term  bonds.
                 When interest rates decline,  the interest  income  received by
                 the Fund may also decline. To a lesser degree, an investment in
                 the Fund is  subject to credit  risk.  This is the risk that an
                 issuer  of the  bonds  held by the  Fund may not be able to pay
                 interest or principal  when due. The market prices of bonds are
                 affected by the credit quality of their issuers. While the Fund
                 primarily  invests in municipal  bonds that are insured against
                 credit  risk,  the  insurance  does not  eliminate  credit risk
                 because the insurer may not be financially  able to pay claims.
                 In  addition,  not all of the  securities  held by the Fund are
                 insured.  Moreover,  the insurance does not apply in any way to
                 the market prices of securities owned by the Fund or the Fund's
                 share  price,  both of which will  fluctuate.  The Fund may, at
                 times, engage in short-term trading, which could produce higher
                 brokerage costs and taxable  distributions  and may result in a
                 lower total return for the Fund. Accordingly, the value of your
                 investment  in the Fund will go up and down,  which  means that
                 you could lose money.

                 An  investment  in the  Fund is not a bank  deposit  and is not
                 insured  or  guaranteed  by  the  Federal   Deposit   Insurance
                 Corporation or any other government agency.

           Who should consider buying the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II?

                 The Insured Tax Exempt Fund II may be used by  individuals as a
                 core holding for an investment  portfolio or as a base on which
                 to build a portfolio. It may be appropriate for you if you:

                    o   Are seeking a relatively  conservative  investment which
                        provides a high degree of credit quality,

                    o   Are seeking  income that is exempt from  federal  income
                        tax, including the AMT,

                    o   Are seeking a relatively high level of tax exempt income
                        and are  willing to assume a  moderate  degree of market
                        volatility to achieve this goal, and

                    o   Have a long-term investment horizon and are able to ride
                        out market cycles.


                                       3
<PAGE>

                 The Insured Tax Exempt Fund II is generally not appropriate for
                 retirement  accounts  or  investors  in low  tax  brackets,  or
                 corporate or similar  business  accounts.  Different  tax rules
                 apply to corporations and other entities.

                How has the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II performed?

The bar chart and table  below  show you how the Fund's  performance  has varied
from year to year and in comparison with a broad-based  index.  This information
gives you some indication of the risks of investing in the Fund.

Prior to December 18, 2000, the Fund was named the Executive  Investors  Insured
Tax Exempt Fund and had only one undesignated  class of shares. The Fund now has
two  classes of shares:  Class A and Class B shares.  The  original  Insured Tax
Exempt Fund shares are  designated as Class A shares.  Class B is a new class of
shares.  The bar chart shows  changes in the  performance  of the Fund's Class A
shares for each of the last nine calendar years.  The bar chart does not reflect
sales charges that you may pay upon  purchase or  redemption of Fund shares.  If
they were included, the returns would be less than those shown.





                                       4
<PAGE>

                               INSURED TAX EXEMPT

      1991      1992    1993    1994    1995    1996    1997    1998    1999

     13.20%    11.03%  15.74%  -3.95%  20.53%   4.11%  10.30%   7.39%  -1,92%


During  the  periods  shown,  the  highest  quarterly  return was 8.06% (for the
quarter ended March 31, 1995),  and the lowest  quarterly return was -5.64% (for
the  quarter  ended  March 31,  1994).  The  Fund's  past  performance  does not
necessarily indicate how the Fund will perform in the future.

The  following  table shows how the average  annual total returns for the Fund's
Class A shares  compare to those of the  Lehman  Brothers  Municipal  Bond Index
("Lehman  Index") as of December 31, 1999.  This table  assumes that the maximum
sales charge or contingent  deferred  sales charge  ("CDSC") was paid.  Prior to
December 18, 2000, the sales charge on shares that are now designated as Class A
shares was lower. The Lehman Index is a total return  performance  benchmark for
the investment grade tax-exempt bond market. The Lehman Index does not take into
account fees and expenses that an investor would incur in holding the securities
in the Lehman Index. If it did so, the returns would be lower than those shown.

                                    1 Year*          5 Years* Inception
                                                            (7/26/90)

Class A Shares                      (8.05)%          6.44%             7.51%
Class B Shares                      N/A              N/A               N/A
Lehman Index                        (2.06)%          6.90%             6.93%**


*The annual returns are based upon calendar years.
**The average annual total return shown is for the period 7/31/90 to 12/31/99.


<PAGE>

        What are the fees and expenses of the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II?

This table  describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if you buy and hold
shares of the Fund.

                                                           Class A     Class B
                                                           Shares      Shares
                                                           ------      ------
Shareholder fees
(fees paid directly from your investment)

Maximum sales charge (load) imposed on purchases
     (as a percentage of offering price)................    6.25%       None
Maximum deferred sales charge (load)..
     (as a percentage of the lower of purchase
     price or redemption price).........................    None*        4.0%**


*A  contingent  deferred  sales  charge  of  1%  will  be  assessed  on  certain
redemptions of Class A shares that are purchased without a sales charge.

**4.0% in the first year;  declining to 0% after  the sixth year. Class B shares
convert to Class A shares after 8 years.

Annual Fund operating expenses
(expenses that are deducted from Fund assets)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                            Distribution                        Total
                                            and Service                      Annual Fund    Fee Waivers and
                            Management        (12b-1)         Other           Operating         Expense
                             Fees(1)         Fees (2)       Expenses(3)       Expenses(4)     Assumption(4)     Net Expenses(4)
                            ----------      -------------   -----------      -----------     --------------    ---------------
<S>                           <C>             <C>             <C>               <C>               <C>               <C>
Class A Shares                1.00%            .30%            .30%             1.60%             .60%              1.00%
Class B Shares                1.00%           1.00%            .30%             2.30%             .55%              1.75%
</TABLE>

(1)  For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1999, the Adviser waived  Management
     Fees in excess of 0.30%. The Adviser has contractually agreed with the Fund
     to waive  Management  Fees in excess of 0.40% for the  fiscal  year  ending
     December 31, 2000, and .55% for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2001.

(2)  Prior to December  18,  2000,  the maximum Rule 12b-1 fee on Class A shares
     was .50%.  For the fiscal year ended  December  31, 1999,  the  Distributor
     waived 12b-1 Fees in excess of 0.40%.  The  Distributor  has  contractually
     agreed  with the Fund to waive 12b-1 Fees in excess of 0.30% for the fiscal
     year ending December 31, 2000, and .25% for the fiscal year ending December
     31, 2001.  Because the Fund pays 12b-1 Fees,  long-term  shareholders could
     pay more than the economic equivalent of the maximum front-end sales charge
     permitted by the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.

(3)  The Adviser has  contractually  agreed to assume "other expenses" in excess
     of .10% for the fiscal  year ending  December  31,  2000,  and .20% for the
     fiscal year ending  December 31, 2001. For Class B shares "other  expenses"
     are estimated.

(4)  The Fund has an  expense  offset  arrangement  that may  reduce  the Fund's
     custodian  fee based on the amount of cash  maintained by the Fund with its
     custodian.  Any such fee  reductions  are not reflected  under Total Annual
     Fund Operating  Expenses or Net Expenses.  Fee Waivers and Net Expenses are
     based upon contractual  commitments for the fiscal year ending December 31,
     2001.

Example
This  example  helps you to compare the costs of  investing in the Fund with the
cost of investing in other mutual funds. The example assumes that (1) you invest
$10,000 in the Fund for the time periods indicated; (2) your investment has a 5%
return each year; and (3) the Fund's operating  expenses remain the same, except
for year one which is net of fees waived and  expenses  assumed.  Although  your
actual costs may be higher or lower,  under these  assumptions  your costs would
be:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                         One Year        Three Years       Five Years         Ten Years
<S>                                      <C>             <C>               <C>                <C>
If you redeem your shares:
Class A shares                             $721            $1,043            $1,388            $2,359
Class B shares                             $578             $966             $1,380            $2,417*

If you do not redeem your shares:
Class A shares                             $721            $1,043            $1,388            $2,359
Class B shares                             $178             $666             $1,180            $2,417*
</TABLE>

*Assumes conversion to Class A shares eight years after purchase.

                    THE INSURED TAX-EXEMPT FUND II IN DETAIL

   What are the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II's objective, principal investment
                        strategies, and principal risks?

Objective:       The Fund seeks a high level of  interest  income that is exempt
                 from federal  income tax and is not a tax  preference  item for
                 purposes of the AMT.

Principal  Investment  Strategies:  The Fund  invests  at least 80% of its total
assets in Municipal  Securities  that pay  interest  that is exempt from federal
income  tax,  including  the AMT.  The Fund may also  invest  in other  types of
Municipal  Securities.  Municipal  Securities  include  private  activity bonds,
industrial  development bonds,  certificates of participation,  municipal notes,
municipal commercial paper, variable rate demand notes, and floating rate demand
notes.  Municipal  Securities are issued by state and local  governments,  their
agencies  and  authorities,  the  District  of Columbia  and any  commonwealths,
territories or possessions of the United States (including Guam, Puerto Rico and
the U.S. Virgin Islands) or their  respective  agencies,  instrumentalities  and
authorities.  The Fund  diversifies  its assets among  Municipal  Securities  of
different   states,   municipalities,   and  U.S.   territories,   rather   than
concentrating in bonds of a particular state or municipality.

All  municipal  bonds in which the Fund  invests  are  insured  as to the timely
payment of interest and principal by independent  insurance  companies which are
rated in the top rating category by a nationally  recognized  statistical rating
organization,  such as Moody's,  Standard & Poor's Ratings Group and Fitch IBCA.
The Fund may purchase bonds and other  Municipal  Securities  which have already
been insured by the issuer,  underwriter, or some other party or it may purchase
uninsured  bonds and insure  them under a policy  purchased  by the Fund.  While
every municipal bond purchased by the Fund must be insured,  the Fund is allowed
to invest up to 20% of its assets in securities that are not insured.  (In other

                                       7
<PAGE>

words,  at least 80% of the Fund's  assets must be  insured.)  In  general,  the
non-insured  securities  held by the Fund are  limited to  municipal  commercial
paper and other  short-term  investments.  In any event, as described below, the
insurance  does not guarantee the market values of the bonds held by the Fund or
the Fund's share price.

The Fund follows the strategy of investing in long-term  municipal bonds,  which
are  generally  more  volatile  in price but offer  more  yield  than  short- or
intermediate-term  bonds. The Fund generally  purchases bonds with maturities of
fifteen years or more. The Fund adjusts the duration of its portfolio based upon
its outlook on interest rates. Duration is a measurement of a bond's sensitivity
to changes in interest rates that takes into consideration not only the maturity
of the bond but also the time value of money that will be received from the bond
over its life. The Fund will  generally  adjust the duration of its portfolio by
buying or  selling  Municipal  Securities,  including  zero  coupon  bonds.  For
example,  if the Fund believes  that interest  rates are likely to rise, it will
generally attempt to reduce its duration by purchasing Municipal Securities with
shorter maturities or selling Municipal  Securities with longer maturities.  The
Fund may,  at times,  engage in short term  trading in an effort to improve  its
performance.

In  selecting  investments,  the Fund  considers  maturity,  coupon  and  yield,
relative  value of an issue,  the  credit  quality  of the  issuer,  the cost of
insurance and the outlook for interest  rates and the economy.  Up to 20% of the
Fund's  net assets may be  invested  in  securities,  the  interest  on which is
subject to Federal income tax,  including the AMT. The Fund will usually sell an
investment  when there are changes in the  interest  rate  environment  that are
adverse  to  the  investment  or it  falls  short  of  the  portfolio  manager's
expectations.  The Fund will not necessarily sell an investment if its rating is
reduced or there is a default by the issuer.  Information  on the Fund's  recent
strategies  and holdings can be found in the most recent annual report (see back
cover).

Principal  Risks:  Any  investment  carries  with  it some  level  of  risk.  An
investment  offering greater  potential rewards generally carries greater risks.
Here are the principal risks of owning the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II:

Interest  Rate Risk:  The market  value of Municipal  Securities  is affected by
changes in  interest  rates.  When  interest  rates rise,  the market  values of
Municipal Securities decline, and when interest rates decline, the market values
of Municipal Securities  increase.  The price volatility of Municipal Securities
also  depends  on their  maturities  and  durations.  Generally,  the longer the
maturity and duration of a Municipal  Security,  the greater its  sensitivity to
interest  rates.  To  compensate  investors  for  this  higher  risk,  Municipal
Securities  with longer  maturities and durations  generally offer higher yields
than Municipal Securities with shorter maturities and durations.

Interest rate risk also  includes the risk that the yields  received by the Fund
on some of its investments will decline as interest rates decline. The Fund buys
investments  with fixed  maturities as well as investments  that give the issuer
the option to "call" or redeem these investments before their maturity dates. If
investments  mature or are "called"  during a time of declining  interest rates,
the Fund will have to  reinvest  the  proceeds  in  investments  offering  lower
yields.  The Fund also invests in floating  rate and variable rate demand notes.
When interest rates decline, the rates paid on these securities may decline.

Credit  Risk:  This is the risk that an issuer of Municipal  Securities  will be
unable to pay interest or  principal  when due.  Although  all of the  municipal
bonds purchased by the Fund are insured as to scheduled payments of interest and
principal,  the insurance does not eliminate credit risk because the insurer may
not be financially able to pay interest and principal on the bonds and up to 20%
of the Fund's assets may be invested in securities  that are not insured.  It is
also important to note that,  although  insurance may increase the credit safety
of investments  held by the Fund, it decreases the Fund's yield as the Fund must

                                       8
<PAGE>

pay for the insurance directly or indirectly.  It is also important to emphasize
that the insurance does not protect against  fluctuations in the market value of
the municipal bonds owned by the Fund or the share price of the Fund.

Market Risk: The Fund is subject to market risk. Municipal Securities' prices in
general may decline over short or even extended periods primarily due to changes
in interest rates and the credit conditions of the issuers.  This is another way
of describing  interest rate risk and credit risk.  However,  market prices also
fluctuate with the forces of supply and demand. Municipal Securities may decline
in value even if the  overall  market is doing well.  Accordingly,  the value of
your investment in the Fund will go up and down, which means that you could lose
money.

Frequent  Trading Risk:  The Fund may, at times,  engage in short-term  trading,
which could produce higher  brokerage  costs and taxable  distributions  and may
result in a lower total return for the Fund.

                   Who Manages the Insured Tax-Exempt Fund II

First Investors Management Company,  Inc. ("FIMCO") is the investment adviser to
the Fund.  Its address is 95 Wall Street,  New York,  NY 10005.  It currently is
investment  adviser to 50 mutual  funds or series of funds with total net assets
of  approximately  $6  billion.  FIMCO  supervises  all  aspects  of the  Fund's
operations and determines the Fund's portfolio transactions.

FIMCO  assumed the  responsibility  of managing  the Fund on December  18, 2000.
Prior to that date,  Executive  Investors  Management  Company,  Inc.  ("EIMCO")
served as investment  adviser to the Fund. FIMCO and EIMCO are both wholly owned
subsidiaries of First  Investors  Consolidated  Corporation,  and they share the
same offices,  employees,  and resources. For the fiscal year ended December 31,
1999,  EIMCO  received  advisory  fees of 0.30% of the Fund's  average daily net
assets, net of waiver.

Clark D. Wagner has served as Portfolio Manager of the Fund since July 22, 1991.
Prior to December 18, 2000, Mr. Wagner managed the Fund as an employee of EIMCO.
He currently  manages the Fund as a FIMCO  employee.  Mr.  Wagner also serves as
Portfolio  Manager of certain other First Investors  Funds.  Mr. Wagner has been
Chief Investment Officer of FIMCO since 1992.

                            Buying and Selling Shares

                  How and When Does the Fund Price Its Shares?

The share price  (which is called "net asset  value" or "NAV" per share) for the
Fund is calculated  once each day as of 4 p.m.,  Eastern Time ("E.T."),  on each
day the New York Stock Exchange  ("NYSE") is open for regular trading.  The NYSE
is closed on most national  holidays and Good Friday. In the event that the NYSE
closes early, the share price will be determined as of the time of the closing.

To  calculate  the  NAV,  the  Fund  first  values  its  assets,  subtracts  its
liabilities, and divides the balance, called net assets, by the number of shares
outstanding.  The  prices  or NAVs of Class A  shares  and  Class B shares  will
generally differ because they have different expenses.

In valuing its assets,  the Fund uses the market value of  securities  for which
market  quotations  or last sale prices are readily  available.  If there are no
readily  available  quotations  or last sale  prices  for an  investment  or the
available  quotations are considered to be  unreliable,  the securities  will be
valued at their fair value as  determined  in good faith  pursuant to procedures
adopted by the Board of Trustees of the Fund.

                                       9
<PAGE>

                              How do I buy shares?

You  may  buy  shares  of  the  Fund  through  a  First   Investors   registered
representative   or  through  a  registered   representative  of  an  authorized
broker-dealer ("Representative"). Your Representative will help you complete and
submit an application. Your initial investment must be at least $1,000. However,
we have lower initial investment  requirements for certain types of accounts and
offer automatic  investment  plans that allow you to open a Fund account with as
little as $50.  Subsequent  investments may be made in any amount.  You can also
arrange to make systematic investments  electronically from your bank account or
through payroll deduction. All the various ways you can buy shares are explained
in the Shareholder  Manual. For further information on the procedures for buying
shares,  please  contact your  Representative  or call  Shareholder  Services at
1-800-423-4026.

If we receive  your  application  or order in our  Woodbridge,  N.J.  offices in
correct  form,  as described in the  Shareholder  Manual,  prior to the close of
regular trading on the NYSE, your  transaction will be priced at that day's NAV.
If you place your order with your  Representative  prior to the close of regular
trading  on the NYSE,  your  transaction  will also be priced at that  day's NAV
provided that your  Representative  transmits the order to our Woodbridge,  N.J.
offices by 5 p.m.,  E.T. Orders placed after the close of regular trading on the
NYSE  will be  priced  at the  next  business  day's  NAV.  The  procedures  for
processing  transactions are explained in more detail in our Shareholder  Manual
which is available upon request.

The Fund  reserves  the  right to  refuse  any  order to buy  shares if the Fund
determines  that  doing so would  be in the  best  interest  of the Fund and its
shareholders.

                      Which class of shares is best for me?

The Fund has two  classes  of  shares,  Class A and Class B.  While  each  class
invests in the same  portfolio of  securities,  the classes have separate  sales
charge and expense structures. Because of the different expense structures, each
class of shares generally will have different NAVs and dividends.

The principal  advantages of Class A shares are the lower overall expenses,  the
availability  of quantity  discounts  on volume  purchases  and certain  account
privileges that are available only on Class A shares. The principal advantage of
Class B shares is that all of your money is invested from the outset.

Class A shares of the Fund are sold at the public  offering price which includes
a  front-end  sales  load.  The  sales  charge  declines  with  the size of your
purchase, as illustrated below.

                                 Class A Shares

Your investment                 Sales Charge as a percentage of
                                -------------------------------
                                offering price     net amount invested

Less than $25,000               6.25%                     6.67%
$25,000-$49,999                 5.75                      6.10
$50,000-$99,999                 5.50                      5.82
$100,000-$249,999               4.50                      4.71
$250,000-$499,999               3.50                      3.63
$500,000-$999,999               2.50                      2.56
$1,000,000 or more                 0*                        0*


                                       10
<PAGE>

*If you  invest  $1,000,000  or  more in  Class A  shares,  you  will  not pay a
front-end  sales charge.  However,  if you make such an investment and then sell
your shares  within 24 months of purchase,  you will pay a  contingent  deferred
sales charge ("CDSC") of 1.00%.

If you were a  shareholder  of the Fund prior to  December  18,  2000,  you will
continue  to be able to  purchase  additional  Class A shares of the Fund at the
lower  sales  charge  which was then in effect  for as long as you  maintain  an
investment  in the  Fund.  The  following  shows  the  sales  charges  that were
applicable prior to December 18, 2000.

Your investment                 Sales Charge as a percentage of
                                -------------------------------
                                offering price       net amount invested

Less than $100,000              4.75%                       4.99%
$100,000-$249,999               3.90                        4.06
$250,000-$499,999               2.90                        2.99
$500,000-$999,999               2.40                        2.46
$1,000,000 or more                 0*                          0*

*If you invest  $1,000,000 or more,  you will not pay a front-end  sales charge.
However,  if you make such an  investment  and then sell your  shares  within 24
months of purchase,  you will pay a contingent deferred sales charge ("CDSC") of
1.00%.

Class B shares are sold at net asset value,  without any initial  sales  charge.
However,  you may pay a CDSC when you sell your  shares.  The CDSC  declines the
longer you hold your shares,  as  illustrated  below.  Class B shares convert to
Class A shares after eight years.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                 Class B Shares

  Year of Redemption                                 CDSC as a Percentage of Purchase Price or NAV at Redemption
  ------------------                                 -----------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                                     <C>
Within the 1st or 2nd year.......................................                       4%
Within the 3rd or 4th year.......................................                       3
In the 5th year   ...............................................                       2
In the 6th year   ...............................................                       1
Within the 7th year and 8th year.................................                       0
</TABLE>

There is no CDSC on Class B shares which are acquired  through  reinvestment  of
dividends  or  distributions.  The CDSC is imposed on the lower of the  original
purchase  price or the net asset value of the shares being sold. For purposes of
determining  the CDSC, all purchases made during a calendar month are counted as
having  been  made on the  first day of that  month at the  average  cost of all
purchases made during that month.

To keep your  CDSC as low as  possible,  each  time you place a request  to sell
shares,  we will first sell any shares in your  account  that carry no CDSC.  If
there is an insufficient number of these shares to meet your request in full, we
will then sell those shares that have the lowest CDSC.

Sales charges and CDSCs may be reduced or waived under certain circumstances and
for  certain  groups.  Consult  your  Representative  or  call  us  directly  at
1-800-423-4026 for details.

The Fund has  adopted a plan  pursuant to Rule 12b-1 that allows the Fund to pay
distribution  fees for the sale and  distribution  of its shares.  Each class of
shares pays Rule 12b-1 fees for the  marketing  of fund shares and for  services
provided to shareholders.  The plans provide for payments at annual rates (based
on average daily net assets) of up to 0.30% on Class A shares and 1.00% on Class
B shares.  No more than 0.25% of these  payments may be for service fees.  These

                                       11
<PAGE>

fees are paid monthly in arrears.  Because these fees are paid out of the Fund's
assets on an ongoing basis, the higher fees for Class B shares will increase the
cost of your investment. Rule 12b-1 fees may cost you more over time than paying
other types of sales charges.

Because of the lower overall  expenses on Class A shares,  we recommend  Class A
shares for  purchases in excess of $250,000.  If you are  investing in excess of
$1,000,000,  we will  only  sell  Class A shares  to you.  For  purchases  below
$250,000,  the class that is best for you generally  depends upon the amount you
invest,  your time  horizon,  and your  preference  for paying the sales  charge
initially  or later.  If you fail to tell us what Class of shares  you want,  we
will purchase Class A shares for you.

                              How do I sell shares?

You may redeem your Fund shares on any day the Fund is open for business by:

      o   Contacting your  Representative  who will place a redemption order for
          you;

      o   Sending a written redemption request to Administrative Data Management
          Corp., ("ADM") at 581 Main Street, Woodbridge, NJ 07095-1198;

      o   Telephoning the Special Services Department of ADM at [1-800-342-6221]
          (if you have elected to have telephone privileges); or

      o   Instructing us to make an electronic  transfer to a predesignated bank
          (if you have completed an application authorizing such transfers).

Shares that you have owned for less than 15 days may only be redeemed by written
request.  Your  redemption  request will be processed at the price next computed
after we receive the  request in good order,  as  described  in the  Shareholder
Manual. For all requests, have your account number available.

Payment of redemption  proceeds generally will be made within 7 days. If you are
redeeming shares which you recently  purchased by check,  payment may be delayed
to verify that your check has cleared (which may take longer than 7 days).

If your  account  falls below the minimum  account  balance for any reason other
than market  fluctuation,  the Fund  reserves  the right to redeem your  account
without your  consent or to impose a low balance  account fee of $15 annually on
60 days prior  notice.  The Fund may also  redeem  your  account or impose a low
balance  account fee if you have  established  your  account  under a systematic
investment  program  and  discontinue  the  program  before you meet the minimum
account  balance.  You may avoid redemption or imposition of a fee by purchasing
additional  Fund shares during this 60-day period to bring your account  balance
to the required  minimum.  If you own Class B shares,  you will not be charged a
CDSC on a low balance redemption.

The Fund  reserves  the right to make  in-kind  redemptions.  This means that it
could  respond  to a  redemption  request by  distributing  shares of the Fund's
underlying investments rather than distributing cash.



     Can I exchange my shares for the shares of other First Investors Funds?


                                       12
<PAGE>

You may exchange  shares of the Fund for shares of other First  Investors  Funds
without paying any  additional  sales charge.  You can only exchange  within the
same class of shares (i.e., Class A to Class A). Consult your  Representative or
call ADM at 1-800-423-4026 for details.

The Fund  reserves the right to reject any  exchange  request that appears to be
part of a market timing  strategy  based upon the holding  period of the initial
investment,  the amount of the investment being  exchanged,  the funds involved,
and the background of the shareholder or dealer  involved.  The Fund is designed
for long-term investment  purposes.  It is not intended to provide a vehicle for
short-term market timing.

                                ACCOUNT POLICIES

              What about dividends and capital gain distributions?

To the extent  that it has net  investment  income,  the Fund will  declare on a
daily  basis and pay,  on a monthly  basis,  dividends  from its net  investment
income.  Any net realized  capital gains will be declared and  distributed on an
annual basis, usually at the end of the Fund's fiscal year. The Fund may make an
additional  distribution  in any year if necessary to avoid a federal excise tax
on certain undistributed income and capital gain.

Dividends and other  distributions paid on both classes of the Fund's shares are
calculated at the same time and in the same manner.  Dividends on Class B shares
of the Fund are  expected to be lower than those for its Class A shares  because
of the higher  distribution fees borne by the Class B shares.  Dividends on each
class  also  might  be  affected   differently   by  the   allocation  of  other
class-specific  expenses. In order to be eligible to receive a dividend or other
distribution, you must own Fund shares as of the close of business on the record
date of the distribution.

You may choose to  reinvest  all  dividends  and other  distributions  at NAV in
additional shares of the same class of the Fund or certain other First Investors
Funds, or receive all dividends and other  distributions  in cash. If you do not
select  an  option  when  you  open  your  account,   all  dividends  and  other
distributions will be reinvested in additional Fund shares. If you do not cash a
distribution  check and do not notify ADM to issue a new check within 12 months,
the  distribution   may  be  reinvested  in  additional  Fund  shares.   If  any
correspondence  sent by the Fund is returned as  "undeliverable,"  dividends and
other distributions  automatically will be reinvested in additional Fund shares.
No interest will be paid to you while a distribution remains uninvested.

A  dividend  or other  distribution  paid on a class of  shares  will be paid in
additional  shares  of  the  distributing  class  if  the  total  amount  of the
distribution  is under $5 or the Fund has  received  notice of your death (until
written  alternate  payment  instructions  and  other  necessary  documents  are
provided by your legal representative).

                                What about taxes?

For individual shareholders,  income dividends paid by the Fund should generally
be exempt from federal income taxes, including the federal AMT. Distributions by
the Fund of interest  income from taxable  obligations,  if any, and  short-term
capital  gains are taxed to you as  ordinary  income.  For  federal  income  tax
purposes,  long-term capital gain  distributions by the Fund are taxed to you as
long-term capital gains,  regardless of how long you owned your Fund shares. You
are taxed in the same manner whether you receive your dividends and capital gain
distributions  in cash or reinvest them in additional Fund shares.  Your sale or
exchange of Fund shares will be considered a taxable event for you. Depending on
the purchase  price and the sale price of the shares you sell or  exchange,  you
may have a gain or a loss on the  transaction.  You are  responsible for any tax
liabilities generated by your transactions.


                                       13
<PAGE>

 How do I obtain a complete explanation of all account privileges and policies?

The Fund offers a full range of special privileges, including special investment
programs for group retirement plans,  systematic investment programs,  automatic
payroll investment programs,  telephone privileges, and expedited redemptions by
wire order or Automated  Clearing House transfer.  The full range of privileges,
and related policies,  are described in a special Shareholder Manual,  which you
may obtain  upon  request.  For more  information  on the full range of services
available, please contact us directly at 1-800-423-4026.





                                       14
<PAGE>


                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

The financial  highlights  table is intended to help you  understand  the Fund's
financial  performance  for the past five years.  Certain  information  reflects
financial  results  for a single  Fund  share.  The total  returns  in the table
represents  the  rates  that an  investor  would  have  earned  (or  lost) on an
investment   in  the  Fund   (assuming   reinvestment   of  all   dividends  and
distributions).  The information has been audited by Tait, Weller & Baker, whose
report,  along with the Fund's  financial  statements,  are included in the SAI,
which is available upon request.


                                       15

<PAGE>

<TABLE>


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   PER SHARE DATA FOR CLASS A SHARES
                         ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<CAPTION>

                                                                                 Less Distributions
                                          Income from Investment Operations             from
                                          ---------------------------------      ------------------

                                 Net Asset
                                     Value
                                 ---------        Net      Net Realized                       Net
                                 Beginning    Invest-    and Unrealized     Total from    Invest-         Net    Total
                                        of       ment    Gain (Loss) on     Investment       ment    Realized   Distri-
                               Year/Period     Income       Investments     Operations     Income       Gains   butions
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

INSURED TAX EXEMPT
FUND II
------------------
<S>                               <C>          <C>          <C>             <C>         <C>         <C>
1995......................        $12.53       $.72         $1.80           $2.52       $.73         $.28      $1.01
1996......................         14.04        .66          (.10)            .56        .67          .11        .78
1997......................         13.82        .67           .71            1.38        .67          .12        .79
1998......................         14.41        .66           .39            1.05        .66          .24        .90
1999......................         14.56        .67          (.94)           (.27)       .65          .03        .68
2000o.....................         13.61        .33           .38             .71        .34            -        .34
</TABLE>


*    Calculated without sales charges
+    Net of expenses waived or assumed
o        Based on the Fund's semi-annual report dated June 30, 2000
(a)  Annualized




                                       16
<PAGE>


<TABLE>

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA

                                                                         Ratio to Average Net
                                                                        Assets Before Expenses
                                                Ratio to Average         Waived or Assumed
                                                  Net Assets +           -----------------
                                                ----------------
<CAPTION>

      Net Asset                                                                    Net
          Value       Total     Net Assets                        Net              Investment    Portfolio
            End     Return*    End of Year     Expenses    Investment    Expenses  Income (%)     Turnover
 of Year/Period         (%)  (in millions)          (%)    Income (%)         (%)                 Rate (%)
---------------- ------------ --------- ----------------- ------------ ----------- ----------- ------------
<S>                  <C>           <C>         <C>          <C>             <C>       <C>         <C>

         $14.04      20.53         $13         .50           5.35            1.74      4.11        147
          13.82       4.11          15         .75           4.85            1.71      3.89        116
          14.41      10.30          16         .75           4.80            1.71      3.84        126
          14.56       7.39          17         .80           4.50            1.73      3.57        172
          13.61      (1.92)         16         .80           4.72            1.73      3.79        205
          13.98       5.25          15         .80(a)        4.86(a)         1.80(a)   3.86(a)     88

</TABLE>


                                                             17
<PAGE>

[FIRST INVESTORS LOGO]

INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II

For investors who want more information about the Fund, the following  documents
are available free upon request:

Annual/Semi-Annual  Reports: Additional information about the Fund's investments
is available in the Fund's annual and semi-annual  reports to  shareholders.  In
the Fund's annual  report,  you will find a discussion of the market  conditions
and investment  strategies that  significantly  affected the Fund's  performance
during its last fiscal year.

Statement  of  Additional  Information  (SAI):  The SAI provides  more  detailed
information   about  the  Fund  and  is  incorporated  by  reference  into  this
prospectus.

Shareholder  Manual: The Shareholder  Manual provides more detailed  information
about the purchase, redemption and sale of the Fund's shares.

You can get free copies of reports, the SAI and the Shareholder Manual,  request
other  information  and discuss your questions  about the Fund by contacting the
Fund at:

Administrative Data Management Corp.
581 Main Street
Woodbridge, NJ 07095-1198
Telephone: 1-800-423-4026

You can review and copy Fund documents  (including reports,  Shareholder Manuals
and SAIs) at the Public  Reference Room of the SEC in  Washington,  D.C. You can
also obtain  copies of Fund  documents  after  paying a  duplicating  fee (i) by
writing to the Public Reference Section of the SEC, Washington,  D.C. 20549-0102
or (ii) by electronic request at [email protected].  You can obtain information
on the  operation of the Public  Reference  Room,  including  information  about
duplicating fee charges,  by calling (202) 942-8090.  Text-only versions of Fund
documents  can be viewed  online or  downloaded  from the EDGAR  database on the
SEC's Internet website at http://www.sec.gov.

                                    (Investment Company Act File No.:  Executive
                                    Investors Trust 811-4927)





<PAGE>

FIRST INVESTORS INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II

95 Wall Street
New York, New York  10005                                         1-800-423-4026

                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
                             DATED DECEMBER 18, 2000

      This is a  Statement  of  Additional  Information  ("SAI")  for  Executive
Investors  Trust  ("Trust"),   an  open-end  diversified  management  investment
company.  The Trust offers one series,  the First  Investors  Insured Tax Exempt
Fund II (the "Fund").

      This SAI is not a prospectus.  It should be read in  conjunction  with the
Trust's  prospectus  dated  December 18, 2000 which may be obtained free of cost
from the Trust at the  address or  telephone  number  noted  above.  Information
regarding  the  purchase,  redemption,  sale and exchange of your Fund shares is
contained in the  Shareholder  Manual,  a separate  section of the SAI that is a
distinct  document and may also be obtained  free of charge by  contacting  your
Fund at the address or telephone number noted above.

                                TABLE OF CONTENTS


                                                                            PAGE
                                                                            ----

INVESTMENT STRATEGIES AND RISKS................................................2
INVESTMENT POLICIES............................................................3
FUTURES AND OPTIONS STRATEGIES.................................................9
PORTFOLIO TURNOVER............................................................14
INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS.......................................................15
TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS.........................................................17
MANAGEMENT....................................................................18
UNDERWRITER...................................................................20
DISTRIBUTION PLANS............................................................20
DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE..............................................21
ALLOCATION OF PORTFOLIO BROKERAGE.............................................22
PURCHASE, REDEMPTION AND EXCHANGE OF SHARES...................................23
TAXES.........................................................................24
PERFORMANCE INFORMATION.......................................................26
GENERAL INFORMATION...........................................................30
APPENDIX A DESCRIPTION OF COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS............................33
APPENDIX B DESCRIPTION OF MUNICIPAL NOTE RATINGS..............................34
APPENDIX C....................................................................46
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS..........................................................47
Shareholder Manual: A Guide to your First Investors Mutual Fund Account.......48


<PAGE>


                         INVESTMENT STRATEGIES AND RISKS

INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II

         The Fund seeks to achieve its  objective  by  investing at least 80% of
its total  assets in municipal  bonds issued by or on behalf of various  states,
territories  and  possessions  of the United States and the District of Columbia
and their political subdivisions,  agencies and instrumentalities,  the interest
on which is exempt from Federal income tax and is not a tax preference  item for
purposes of the Federal alternative minimum tax ("AMT") ("Tax Preference Item").
Up to 20% of the Fund's net assets may be invested in  securities,  the interest
of which is subject to Federal income tax,  including the AMT. The Fund also may
invest up to 20% of its total assets in certificates of participation, municipal
notes,   municipal   commercial  paper  and  variable  rate  demand  instruments
(collectively,   with  municipal  bonds,  "Municipal  Instruments").   The  Fund
generally invests in bonds with maturities of over fifteen years. See "Municipal
Instruments," below.

         While the Fund  diversifies  its  assets  among  municipal  issuers  in
different  states,  municipalities  and  territories,  from  time to time it may
invest  more  than  25% of its  total  assets  in a  particular  segment  of the
municipal bond market,  such as hospital  revenue  bonds,  housing agency bonds,
airport bonds or electric  utility bonds.  Such a possible  concentration of the
Fund's assets could result in its being invested in securities  that are related
in such a way that  economic,  business,  political or other  developments  that
would affect one security would probably  likewise  affect the other  securities
within that particular segment of the bond market.

         The Fund may make  loans of  portfolio  securities  and  invest in zero
coupon municipal securities.  The Fund may invest up to 25% of its net assets in
securities on a "when  issued"  basis,  which  involves an  arrangement  whereby
delivery of, and payment for, the instruments occur up to 45 days after it makes
the agreement to purchase the instruments. The Fund also may invest up to 20% of
its assets, on a temporary basis, in high quality fixed income obligations,  the
interest  on which is subject to Federal  and state or local  income  taxes.  In
addition,  the  Fund may  invest  up to 10% of its  total  assets  in  municipal
obligations on which the rate of interest  varies  inversely with interest rates
on other  municipal  obligations  or an index  (commonly  referred to as inverse
floaters).  The Fund may borrow money for  temporary  or  emergency  purposes in
amounts not exceeding 5% of its total assets. See "Investment Policies," below.

         Although the Fund  generally  invests in  municipal  bonds rated Baa or
higher  by  Moody's  Investors  Service,  Inc.  ("Moody's")  or BBB or higher by
Standard  & Poor's  ("S&P"),  the Fund may  invest up to 5% of its net assets in
lower  rated  municipal  bonds or in  unrated  municipal  bonds  deemed to be of
comparable  quality by First  Investors  Management  Company,  Inc.  ("FIMCO" or
"Adviser").  See "Debt  Securities,"  below.  However,  in each  instance  those
municipal  bonds  will be  covered  by the  insurance  feature  and thus will be
considered to be of higher quality than lower rated  municipal  bonds without an
insurance  feature.  See "Insurance" for a discussion of the insurance  feature.
The Adviser will carefully  evaluate on a case-by-case  basis whether to dispose
of or retain a municipal bond that has been  downgraded in rating  subsequent to
its purchase by the Fund.

         There can be no assurances that future national, regional or state-wide
economic  developments  will not adversely  affect the market value of Municipal
Securities held by the Fund or the ability of particular obligors to make timely
payments of debt service on (or lease payments  relating to) those  obligations.
There is also the risk that  some or all of the  interest  income  that the Fund
receives  might become  taxable or be  determined  to be taxable by the Internal
Revenue  Service,  applicable  state tax authorities or a judicial body. See the
discussion on "Taxes." In addition, there can be no assurances that future court
decisions or legislative  actions will not affect the ability of the issuer of a
Municipal Security to repay its obligations.


                                       2
<PAGE>


         Additional restrictions are set forth in the "Investment  Restrictions"
section of this SAI.

                               INVESTMENT POLICIES

      BANKERS'  ACCEPTANCES.  The  Fund  may  invest  in  bankers'  acceptances.
Bankers'   acceptances  are  short-term  credit   instruments  used  to  finance
commercial  transactions.  Generally,  an  acceptance is a time draft drawn on a
bank by an exporter  or  importer to obtain a stated  amount of funds to pay for
specific  merchandise.  The draft is then  "accepted" by a bank that, in effect,
unconditionally  guarantees  to pay the  face  value  of the  instrument  on its
maturity date. The acceptance may then be held by the accepting bank as an asset
or it may be sold in the  secondary  market at the going rate of interest  for a
specific  maturity.  Although  maturities for  acceptances can be as long as 270
days, most acceptances have maturities of six months or less.

      BOND MARKET CONCENTRATION.  The Fund may invest more than 25% of its total
assets in a  particular  segment of the bond  market,  such as hospital  revenue
bonds,  housing agency bonds,  industrial  development bonds,  airport bonds and
university  dormitory bonds. Such concentration may occur in periods when one or
more of these segments offer higher yields and/or profit potential. The Fund has
no fixed policy as to concentrating  its investments in a particular  segment of
the bond market, because bonds are selected for investment based on appraisal of
their individual value and income. This possible  concentration of the assets of
the Fund may result in the Fund being  invested in securities  which are related
in such a way that economic,  business,  political developments or other changes
which  would  affect  one  security  would  probably  likewise  affect the other
securities within that particular segment of the bond market. Such concentration
of the Fund's  investments  could increase market risks, but risk of non-payment
of interest  when due,  or default of  principal,  are covered by the  insurance
obtained by the Fund.

      CERTIFICATES  OF  DEPOSIT.  The Fund may  invest in bank  certificates  of
deposit ("CDs").  The Federal Deposit Insurance  Corporation is an agency of the
U.S. Government which insures the deposits of certain banks and savings and loan
associations  up to $100,000 per deposit.  The interest on such deposits may not
be insured if this limit is exceeded.  Current Federal  regulations  also permit
such  institutions  to issue  insured  negotiable  CDs in amounts of $100,000 or
more, without regard to the interest rate ceilings on other deposits.  To remain
fully  insured,  these  investments  currently  must be limited to $100,000  per
insured bank or savings and loan association.

      COMMERCIAL  PAPER.  The Fund may invest in  commercial  paper.  Commercial
paper is a promissory note issued by a corporation to finance  short-term needs,
which may either be unsecured or backed by a letter of credit.  Commercial Paper
includes  notes,  drafts or  similar  instruments  payable on demand or having a
maturity at the time of issuance not exceeding nine months, exclusive of days of
grace or any renewal  thereof.  The Fund's  investments in commercial  paper are
limited to  obligations  rated  Prime-l by Moody's or A-l by S&P. See Appendix A
for a description of commercial paper ratings.

      INSURANCE.  The municipal bonds in the Fund's portfolio will be insured as
to their  scheduled  payments of principal  and interest at the time of purchase
either  (1) under a Mutual  Fund  Insurance  Policy  written  by an  independent
insurance  company;  (2) under an  insurance  policy  obtained  subsequent  to a
municipal bond's original issue (a "Secondary Market Insurance Policy");  or (3)
under  an  insurance  policy  obtained  by the  issuer  or  underwriter  of such
municipal  bond at the  time  of  original  issuance  (a  "New  Issue  Insurance
Policy").  An insured  municipal bond in the Fund's portfolio  typically will be
covered by only one of the three policies.  For instance, if a municipal bond is
already covered by a New Issue Insurance  Policy or a Secondary Market Insurance
Policy,  then that  security will not be  additionally  insured under the Mutual
Fund Insurance Policy.


                                       3
<PAGE>


      The Fund has  purchased a Mutual Fund  Insurance  Policy  ("Policy")  from
AMBAC Assurance Corporation ("AMBAC"), a Wisconsin stock insurance company, with
its principal  executive  offices in New York City.  The Policy  guarantees  the
payment of principal and interest on municipal bonds purchased by the Fund which
are eligible for insurance  under the Policy.  Municipal  bonds are eligible for
insurance  if they are  approved by AMBAC  prior to their  purchase by the Fund.
AMBAC  furnished the Fund with an approved  list of municipal  bonds at the time
the Policy was issued and  subsequently  provides  amended and modified lists of
this type at periodic intervals.  AMBAC may withdraw particular  securities from
the approved list and may limit the  aggregate  amount of each issue or category
of  municipal  bonds  therein,  in each case by notice to the Fund  prior to the
entry by the Fund of an order to  purchase  a  specific  amount of a  particular
security  otherwise  eligible for insurance under the Policy.  The approved list
merely  identifies  issuers  whose issues may be eligible for insurance and does
not constitute approval of, or a commitment by, AMBAC to insure such securities.
In determining  eligibility  for insurance,  AMBAC has applied its own standards
which correspond  generally to the standard it normally uses in establishing the
insurability  of new issues of municipal bonds and which are not necessarily the
criteria which would be used in regard to the purchase of municipal bonds by the
Fund. The Policy does not insure:  (1) obligations of, or securities  guaranteed
by, the United States of America or any agency or instrumentality  thereof;  (2)
municipal  bonds which were insured as to payment of  principal  and interest at
the time of their issuance;  (3) municipal bonds purchased by the Fund at a time
when they were  ineligible for insurance;  (4) municipal bonds which are insured
by insurers other than AMBAC;  and (5) municipal bonds which are no longer owned
by the Fund.  AMBAC has  reserved  the  right at any time,  upon 90 days'  prior
written notice to the Fund, to refuse to insure any additional  municipal  bonds
purchased by the Fund, on or after the effective  date of such notice.  If AMBAC
so  notifies  the Fund,  the Fund will  attempt  to replace  AMBAC with  another
insurer.  If another insurer cannot be found to replace AMBAC,  the Fund may ask
its shareholders to approve continuation of its business without insurance.

      In the event of nonpayment  of interest or principal  when due, in respect
of an insured  municipal bond,  AMBAC is obligated under the Policy to make such
payment not later than 30 days after it has been  notified by the Fund that such
nonpayment  has  occurred  (but not earlier  than the date such payment is due).
AMBAC, as regards insurance  payments it may make, will succeed to the rights of
the Fund. Under the Policy, a payment of principal on an insured  municipal bond
is due for payment when the stated  maturity date has been  reached,  which does
not include any earlier due date by reason of redemption,  acceleration or other
advancement  of  maturity  or  extension  or  delay  in  payment  by  reason  of
governmental action.

      The Policy  does not  guarantee  the market  value or yield of the insured
municipal bonds or the net asset value or yield of the Fund's shares. The Policy
will be effective only as to insured  municipal  bonds owned by the Fund. In the
event of a sale by the Fund of a municipal  bond insured  under the Policy,  the
insurance  terminates  as to such  municipal  bond on the  date of  sale.  If an
insured  municipal bond in default is sold by the Fund, AMBAC is liable only for
those payments of interest and principal which are then due and owing and, after
making  such  payments,  AMBAC will have no further  obligations  to the Fund in
respect of such  municipal  bond. It is the intention of the Fund,  however,  to
retain any insured  securities  which are in default or in  significant  risk of
default and to place a value on the defaulted  securities  equal to the value of
similar insured  securities which are not in default.  While a defaulted bond is
held by the Fund,  the Fund continues to pay the insurance  premium  thereon but
also  collects  interest  payments  from the  insurer  and  retains the right to
collect the full amount of principal  from the insurer when the  municipal  bond
comes  due.  See  "Determination  of  Net  Asset  Value"  for  a  more  complete
description of the Fund's method of valuing securities in default and securities
which have a significant risk of default.

      The  Fund  may  purchase  a  Secondary  Market  Insurance  Policy  from an
independent  insurance company rated in the top rating category by S&P, Moody's,
Fitch  IBCA,  Inc.   ("Fitch")  or  any  other  nationally   recognized   rating
organization  which insures a particular bond for the remainder of its term at a


                                       4
<PAGE>


premium  rate  fixed at the time  such  bond is  purchased  by the  Fund.  It is
expected  that  these  premiums  will  range  from 1% to 5% of par  value.  Such
insurance  coverage will be noncancellable and will continue in force so long as
such bond so insured is outstanding.  The Fund may also purchase municipal bonds
which are already insured under a Secondary Market Insurance Policy. A Secondary
Market  Insurance  Policy  could  enable the Fund to sell a municipal  bond to a
third party as an AAA/Aaa rated insured  municipal bond at a market price higher
than what  otherwise  might be  obtainable if the security were sold without the
insurance  coverage.   (Such  rating  is  not  automatic,   however,   and  must
specifically be requested for each bond.) Any difference between the excess of a
bond's  market value as an AAA/Aaa rated bond over its market value without such
rating and the single premium payment would inure to the Fund in determining the
net capital gain or loss realized by the Fund upon the sale of the bond.

      In addition to the contract of insurance  relating to the Fund, there is a
contract of insurance between AMBAC and First Investors  Multi-State Insured Tax
Free Fund,  between  AMBAC and First  Investors  Series Fund,  between AMBAC and
First Investors New York Insured Tax Free Fund, Inc. and between AMBAC and First
Investors  Insured  Tax Exempt  Fund II, Inc.  Otherwise,  neither  AMBAC or any
affiliate thereof, has any material business  relationship,  direct or indirect,
with the Funds.

      AMBAC is a  Wisconsin-domiciled  stock insurance  corporation regulated by
the  Office of the  Commissioner  of  Insurance  of the State of  Wisconsin  and
licensed to do business in 50 states, the District of Columbia, the Territory of
Guam and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, with admitted assets of $4,013,000,000
(unaudited) and statutory capital of approximately $2,402,000,000 (unaudited) as
of December  31,  1999.  Statutory  capital  consists of AMBAC's  policyholders'
surplus and  statutory  contingency  reserve.  S&P,  Moody's and Fitch have each
assigned a triple-A financial strength rating to AMBAC.

      AMBAC has  obtained a private  letter  ruling  from the  Internal  Revenue
Service to the effect that AMBAC's  insuring an  obligation  will not affect the
treatment for Federal income tax purposes of interest on the obligation and that
payment of insurance proceeds representing maturing interest paid by AMBAC under
policy  provisions  substantially  identical to those contained in its municipal
bond  insurance  policy will be treated for Federal  income tax  purposes in the
same manner as if the payments were made by the issuer of the  municipal  bonds.
Investors  should  understand  that a private  letter ruling may not be cited as
precedent  by  persons  other  than  the  taxpayer  to  whom  it  is  addressed;
nevertheless,  those  rulings  may be  viewed  as  generally  indicative  of the
Internal Revenue  Service's views on the proper  interpretation  of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code") and the regulations thereunder.

      AMBAC makes no  representation  regarding the municipal  bonds included in
the investment  portfolio of the Fund or the  advisability  of investing in such
municipal bonds and makes no representation  regarding,  nor has it participated
in the preparation of, the Prospectus and this SAI.

      The  information  relating to AMBAC  contained above has been furnished by
AMBAC. No  representation  is made herein as to the accuracy or adequacy of such
information,  or as to the existence of any adverse changes in such information,
subsequent to the date hereof.

      INVERSE  FLOATERS.  The Fund may invest in derivative  securities on which
the rate of interest varies inversely with interest rates on similar  securities
or the value of an index. For example, an inverse floating rate security may pay
interest at a rate that increases as a specified  interest rate index  decreases
but decreases as that index increases. The secondary market for inverse floaters
may be limited.  The market value of such securities  generally is more volatile
than that of a fixed rate obligation and, like most debt obligations,  will vary
inversely with changes in interest rates. The interest rates on inverse floaters
may be significantly reduced, even to zero, if interest rates rise. The Fund may
invest up to 10% of its net assets in inverse floaters.


                                       5
<PAGE>


      LOANS OF PORTFOLIO  SECURITIES.  The Fund may loan securities to qualified
broker-dealers or other institutional  investors provided:  the borrower pledges
to the Fund and agrees to maintain at all times with the Fund  collateral  equal
to not less  than  100% of the  value of the  securities  loaned  (plus  accrued
interest or dividend,  if any);  the loan is terminable at will by the Fund; the
Fund pays only  reasonable  custodian fees in connection  with the loan; and the
Adviser monitors the creditworthiness of the borrower throughout the life of the
loan. Such loans may be terminated by the Fund at any time and the Fund may vote
the proxies if a material event affecting the investment is to occur. The market
risk  applicable to any security loaned remains a risk of the Fund. The borrower
must add to the  collateral  whenever the market value of the  securities  rises
above the level of such collateral.  The Fund could incur a loss if the borrower
should fail  financially  at a time when the value of the loaned  securities  is
greater than the collateral. The Fund may make loans not in excess of 10% of its
total assets.

      MUNICIPAL  INSTRUMENTS.  As  used  in this  SAI,  "Municipal  Instruments"
include the  following:  (1)  municipal  bonds;  (2) private  activity  bonds or
industrial  development bonds, (3) certificates of participation  ("COPS"),  (4)
municipal  commercial  paper;  (5) municipal notes; and (6) variable rate demand
instruments  (`VRDIs").  Generally,  the value of Municipal  Instruments  varies
inversely with changes in interest rates.

      MUNICIPAL  BONDS.  Municipal bonds are debt obligations that generally are
issued to obtain funds for various public  purposes and have a time to maturity,
at  issuance,  of more  than one  year.  The two  principal  classifications  of
municipal bonds are "general obligation" and "revenue" bonds. General obligation
bonds are  secured by the  issuer's  pledge of its full faith and credit for the
payment of principal and interest. Revenue bonds generally are payable only from
revenues  derived from a particular  facility or class of facilities or, in some
cases,  from the  proceeds of a special tax or other  specific  revenue  source.
There  are  variations  in the  security  of  municipal  bonds,  both  within  a
particular  classification  and between  classifications,  depending on numerous
factors.  The yields on municipal  bonds depend on, among other things,  general
money market  conditions,  condition  of the  municipal  bond market,  size of a
particular  offering,  the maturity of the  obligation and rating of the issuer.
Generally,  the value of municipal bonds varies inversely to changes in interest
rates.

      PRIVATE  ACTIVITY  BONDS.  Certain types of revenue bonds,  referred to as
private  activity  bonds  ("PABs"),  are  issued  by  or  on  behalf  of  public
authorities  to  obtain  funds  to  provide  for  various   privately   operated
facilities,  such as airports or mass transportation  facilities.  Most PABs are
pure revenue bonds and are not backed by the taxing power of the issuing  agency
or  authority.  See "Taxes" for a  discussion  of special  tax  consequences  to
"substantial users," or persons related thereto, of facilities financed by PABs.
CERTIFICATES OF  PARTICIPATION.  COPs provide  participation  interests in lease
revenues and each certificate represents a proportionate interest in or right to
the lease-purchase payment made under municipal lease obligations or installment
sales contracts.  In certain states, COPs constitute a majority of new municipal
financing issues. The possibility that a municipality will not appropriate funds
for  lease  payments  is a risk of  investing  in COPS,  although  this  risk is
mitigated by the fact that each COP will be covered by the insurance feature.

      The Board has established guidelines for determining the liquidity of COPs
in  the  Fund's  portfolio  and,  subject  to its  review,  has  delegated  that
responsibility to the Adviser. Under these guidelines, the Adviser will consider
(1) the  frequency  of trades  and quotes  for the  security,  (2) the number of
dealers  willing  to  purchase  or sell the  security  and the  number  of other
potential  buyers,  (3) the willingness of dealers to undertake to make a market
in the security,  (4) the nature of the marketplace,  namely, the time needed to
dispose of the security,  the method of  soliciting  offers and the mechanics of
transfer,  (5) the coverage of the  obligation by new issue  insurance,  (6) the
likelihood that the  marketability of the obligation will be maintained  through


                                       6
<PAGE>


the time the security is held by the Fund,  and (7) for unrated COPs,  the COPs'
credit  status  analyzed by the  Adviser  according  to the factors  reviewed by
rating agencies.

      MUNICIPAL COMMERCIAL PAPER. Issues of municipal commercial paper which the
Fund may  purchase  are rated  P-1 by  Moody's  or A-1 by S&P or have  insurance
through the issuer or an independent  insurance  company and include  unsecured,
short-term,  negotiable  promissory notes.  Municipal commercial paper is issued
usually to meet temporary capital needs of the issuer or to serve as a source of
temporary  construction  financing.  These  obligations  are paid  from  general
revenues of the issuer or are refinanced  with long-term  debt. A description of
commercial paper ratings is contained in Appendix A.

      MUNICIPAL  NOTES.  Municipal  notes  which the Fund may  purchase  will be
principally  tax  anticipation   notes,   bond   anticipation   notes,   revenue
anticipation  notes and project  notes.  The  obligations  are sold by an issuer
prior to the occurrence of another revenue producing event to bridge a financial
gap for such issuer.  Municipal  notes are usually  general  obligations  of the
issuing  municipality.  Project  notes are issued by housing  agencies,  but are
guaranteed  by the U.S.  Department  of Housing  and Urban  Development  and are
secured by the full faith and credit of the United States.  Such municipal notes
must be rated  MIG-1 by Moody's  or SP-1 by S&P or have  insurance  through  the
issuer or an  independent  insurance  company.  A description  of municipal note
ratings is contained in Appendix B.

      VARIABLE RATE DEMAND  INSTRUMENTS.  VRDIs are Municipal  Instruments,  the
interest  on which is  adjusted  periodically,  which allow the holder to demand
payment of all unpaid  principal plus accrued  interest from the issuer.  A VRDI
that the Fund may purchase will be selected if it meets criteria established and
designed by the Board to minimize risk to the Fund. In addition,  a VRDI must be
rated MIG-1 by Moody's or SP-1 by S&P or insured by the issuer or an independent
insurance company. There is a recognized after-market for VRDIs.

      PREFERRED STOCK. The Fund may invest in preferred stock. A preferred stock
is a blend of the  characteristics  of a bond and common stock. It can offer the
higher yield of a bond and has priority  over common stock in equity  ownership,
but  does not have  the  seniority  of a bond  and,  unlike  common  stock,  its
participation  in the  issuer's  growth  may be  limited.  Preferred  stock  has
preference  over common  stock in the receipt of  dividends  and in any residual
assets after payment to creditors  should the issuer be dissolved.  Although the
dividend is set at a fixed annual rate, in some  circumstances it can be changed
or omitted by the issuer.

      REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS.  A repurchase agreement essentially is a short-term
collateralized  loan.  The lender (a Fund) agrees to purchase a security  from a
borrower  (typically  a  broker-dealer)  at  a  specified  price.  The  borrower
simultaneously  agrees to  repurchase  that same security at a higher price on a
future date (which  typically is the next business day). The difference  between
the purchase price and the repurchase price effectively  constitutes the payment
of interest. In a standard repurchase  agreement,  the securities which serve as
collateral  are  transferred  to a  Fund's  custodian  bank.  In  a  "tri-party"
repurchase agreement, these securities would be held by a different bank for the
benefit of the Fund as buyer and the  broker-dealer as seller. In a "quad-party"
repurchase  agreement,  the  Fund's  custodian  bank also is made a party to the
agreement.  Each Fund may enter into repurchase  agreements with banks which are
members of the Federal Reserve System or securities dealers who are members of a
national securities exchange or are market makers in government securities.  The
period of these repurchase  agreements will usually be short,  from overnight to
one week, and at no time will a Fund invest in repurchase  agreements  with more
than  one  year in  time to  maturity.  The  securities  which  are  subject  to
repurchase  agreements,  however,  may have maturity dates in excess of one year
from the  effective  date of the  repurchase  agreement.  Each Fund will  always
receive,  as  collateral,  securities  whose  market  value,  including  accrued
interest, which will at all times be at least equal to 100% of the dollar amount
invested by the Fund in each agreement,  and the Fund will make payment for such


                                       7
<PAGE>


securities only upon physical delivery or evidence of book entry transfer to the
account of the custodian.  If the seller defaults,  a Fund might incur a loss if
the value of the collateral  securing the  repurchase  agreement  declines,  and
might incur disposition costs in connection with liquidating the collateral.  In
addition, if bankruptcy or similar proceedings are commenced with respect to the
seller of the security, realization upon the collateral by a Fund may be delayed
or limited.  The Fund may not enter into a repurchase  agreement  with more than
seven days to maturity  if, as a result,  more than 15% of the Fund's net assets
would be invested in such repurchase agreements and other illiquid investments.

      RESTRICTED SECURITIES AND ILLIQUID INVESTMENTS.  The Fund may not purchase
or  otherwise  acquire any  security  if, as a result,  more than 15% of its net
assets  (taken at  current  value)  would be  invested  in  securities  that are
illiquid  by virtue of the  absence  of a readily  available  market or legal or
contractual  restrictions  on resale.  This  policy  includes  foreign  issuers'
unlisted  securities  with a limited  trading market and  repurchase  agreements
maturing  in more than seven  days.  This  policy  does not  include  restricted
securities eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of
1933,  as amended  ("1933 Act"),  which the Board or the Adviser has  determined
under Board-approved guidelines are liquid.

      Restricted  securities  which are  illiquid  may be sold only in privately
negotiated  transactions  or  in  public  offerings  with  respect  to  which  a
registration  statement is in effect under the 1933 Act. Such securities include
those that are subject to restrictions contained in the securities laws of other
countries.  Securities that are freely  marketable in the country where they are
principally  traded,  but would not be freely  marketable in the United  States,
will not be subject to this 15% limit.  Where  registration is required,  a Fund
may be  obligated  to pay  all  or  part  of  the  registration  expenses  and a
considerable  period may elapse between the time of the decision to sell and the
time  the  Fund  may  be  permitted  to  sell  a  security  under  an  effective
registration statement. If, during such a period, adverse market conditions were
to develop,  a Fund might obtain a less  favorable  price than prevailed when it
decided to sell.

      In recent years,  a large  institutional  market has developed for certain
securities  that are not  registered  under  the  1933  Act,  including  private
placements,  repurchase  agreements,  commercial paper,  foreign  securities and
corporate bonds and notes.  These  instruments are often  restricted  securities
because the securities are either themselves exempt from registration or sold in
transactions not requiring registration.  Institutional investors generally will
not seek to sell these instruments to the general public, but instead will often
depend  on  an  efficient   institutional  market  in  which  such  unregistered
securities can be readily resold or on an issuer's ability to honor a demand for
repayment.  Therefore, the fact that there are contractual or legal restrictions
on resale to the general public or certain  institutions  is not  dispositive of
the liquidity of such investments.

      Rule  144A  under  the  1933  Act  establishes  a "safe  harbor"  from the
registration  requirements of the 1933 Act for resales of certain  securities to
qualified institutional buyers.  Institutional markets for restricted securities
that  might  develop  as a  result  of Rule  144A  could  provide  both  readily
ascertainable  values for restricted  securities and the ability to liquidate an
investment in order to satisfy share redemption  orders. An insufficient  number
of qualified  institutional  buyers interested in purchasing Rule  144A-eligible
securities held by a Fund, however,  could affect adversely the marketability of
such  portfolio  securities  and a Fund  might  be  unable  to  dispose  of such
securities promptly or at reasonable prices.

      WHEN-ISSUED  SECURITIES.  The Fund may  each  invest  up to 25% of its net
assets in securities  issued on a when-issued  or delayed  delivery basis at the
time the purchase is made. The Fund generally  would not pay for such securities
or start  earning  interest on them until they are issued or received.  However,
when the Fund purchases debt obligations on a when-issued  basis, it assumes the
risks of  ownership,  including  the risk of price  fluctuation,  at the time of
purchase,  not at the time of  receipt.  Failure  of the  issuer  to  deliver  a
security  purchased  by a Fund on a  when-issued  basis may result in the Fund's
incurring a loss or missing an opportunity  to make an  alternative  investment.


                                       8
<PAGE>


When the Fund enters into a commitment  to purchase  securities on a when-issued
basis,  it  establishes a separate  account on its books and records or with its
custodian  consisting of cash or liquid  high-grade debt securities equal to the
amount of that Fund's  commitment,  which are valued at their fair market value.
If on any day the market value of this segregated  account falls below the value
of the Fund's  commitment,  the Fund will be required to deposit additional cash
or qualified securities into the account until equal to the value of that Fund's
commitment.  When the  securities to be purchased are issued,  the Fund will pay
for the securities from available cash, the sale of securities in the segregated
account,  sales  of  other  securities  and,  if  necessary,  from  sale  of the
when-issued  securities  themselves  although this is not  ordinarily  expected.
Securities  purchased on a when-issued basis are subject to the risk that yields
available in the market,  when delivery takes place, may be higher than the rate
to be received on the  securities  the Fund is committed  to  purchase.  Sale of
securities in the segregated  account or sale of the when-issued  securities may
cause the realization of a capital gain or loss.

      ZERO COUPON AND PAY-IN-KIND  SECURITIES.  Zero coupon  securities are debt
obligations  that do not entitle the holder to any periodic  payment of interest
prior to maturity or a specified date when the  securities  begin paying current
interest. They are issued and traded at a discount from their face amount or par
value, which discount varies depending on the time remaining until cash payments
begin,  prevailing  interest rates,  liquidity of the security and the perceived
credit quality of the issuer. Pay-in-kind securities are those that pay interest
through the issuance of additional securities.  The market prices of zero coupon
and  pay-in-kind  securities  generally  are more  volatile  than the  prices of
securities that pay interest  periodically and in cash and are likely to respond
to changes in  interest  rates to a greater  degree  than do other types of debt
securities having similar maturities and credit quality. Original issue discount
earned  each year on zero coupon  securities  (including  zero coupon  Municipal
Securities)  and the "interest" on pay-in-kind  securities must be accounted for
by a Fund that holds the securities  for purposes of  determining  the amount it
must  distribute  that  year to  continue  to  qualify  for tax  treatment  as a
regulated investment company.  Thus, the Fund may be required to distribute as a
dividend  an amount  that is greater  than the total  amount of cash it actually
receives.  See  "Taxes".  These  distributions  must be made from a Fund's  cash
assets or, if necessary, from the proceeds of sales of portfolio securities. The
Fund will not be able to purchase  additional  income-producing  securities with
cash used to make such distributions, and its current income ultimately could be
reduced as a result.

                         FUTURES AND OPTIONS STRATEGIES

      Although  it does not  intend to engage in such  strategies  in the coming
year, the Fund has the legal authority to engage in certain  futures  strategies
to hedge its portfolio,  and in other circumstances permitted by the Commodities
Futures Trading Commission ("CFTC"). In addition, the Fund may engage in certain
options  strategies to enhance income.  The Fund may sell covered listed put and
call options and buy call and put on its portfolio securities and may enter into
closing  transactions  with respect to such  options.  The Fund also may buy and
sell financial  futures  contracts and buy and sell call and put options thereon
traded on a U.S. exchange or board of trade and enter into closing  transactions
with respect to such options.

      Certain special characteristics of, and risks associated with, using these
instruments  and strategies  are discussed  below.  Use of these  instruments is
subject to the applicable  regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission
("SEC"),  the  several  options  and futures  exchanges  upon which  options and
futures  contracts are traded and the CFTC. The  discussion of these  strategies
does not  imply  that the Fund will use them to hedge  against  risks or for any
other purpose.

      Participation in the options or futures markets involves  investment risks
and  transaction  costs to which a Fund would not be  subject  absent the use of
these strategies.  If the Adviser's  prediction of movements in the direction of
the   securities  and  interest  rate  markets  are   inaccurate,   the  adverse


                                       9
<PAGE>


consequences  to the Fund may  leave the Fund in a worse  position  than if such
strategies  were not used.  The Fund  might  not  employ  any of the  strategies
described  below,  and there can be no assurance that any strategy will succeed.
The use of  these  strategies  involve  certain  special  risks,  including  (1)
dependence  on the  Adviser's  ability to  predict  correctly  movements  in the
direction of interest rates and  securities  prices,  (2) imperfect  correlation
between  the  price of  options,  futures  contracts  and  options  thereon  and
movements in the prices of the securities being hedged, (3) the fact that skills
needed  to use  these  strategies  are  different  from  those  needed to select
portfolio  securities and, (4) the possible absence of a liquid secondary market
for any particular instrument at any time.

      COVER FOR  HEDGING  AND OPTION  INCOME  STRATEGIES.  The Fund will not use
leverage in its hedging and option  income  strategies.  The Fund will not enter
into a hedging or option income  strategy that exposes the Fund to an obligation
to another party unless it owns either (1) an offsetting ("covered") position in
securities  or other  options or futures  contracts  or (2) cash  and/or  liquid
assets with a value sufficient at all times to cover its potential  obligations.
Each Fund will comply with  guidelines  established  by the SEC with  respect to
coverage  of hedging  and  option  income  strategies  by mutual  funds and,  if
required,  will set aside cash and/or liquid assets in a segregated account with
its custodian in the prescribed  amount.  Securities or other options or futures
positions used for cover and assets held in a segregated  account cannot be sold
or closed out while the hedging or option income strategy is outstanding  unless
they are replaced with similar assets. As a result,  there is a possibility that
the use of cover or segregation  involving a large percentage of a Fund's assets
could  impede  portfolio  management  or the Fund's  ability to meet  redemption
requests or other current obligations.

      OPTIONS STRATEGIES.  The Fund may purchase call options on securities that
the Adviser  intends to include in its  portfolio  in order to fix the cost of a
future purchase. Call options also may be used as a means of participating in an
anticipated price increase of a security. In the event of a decline in the price
of the underlying security, use of this strategy would serve to limit the Fund's
potential  loss to the option premium paid;  conversely,  if the market price of
the underlying  security  increases above the exercise price and the Fund either
sells or exercises the option, any profit eventually realized will be reduced by
the  premium.  The Fund may  purchase  put  options in order to hedge  against a
decline in the market value of securities held in its portfolio.  The put option
enables the Fund to sell the underlying  security at the predetermined  exercise
price;  thus the  potential  for loss to the Fund  below the  exercise  price is
limited to the  option  premium  paid.  If the  market  price of the  underlying
security is higher  than the  exercise  price of the put option,  any profit the
Fund  realizes on the sale of the  security  will be reduced by the premium paid
for the put option less any amount for which the put option may be sold.

      The Fund may write covered call options on  securities to increase  income
in the form of premiums received from the purchasers of the options.  Because it
can be expected  that a call option will be exercised if the market value of the
underlying  security  increases to a level greater than the exercise price,  the
Fund will write  covered call options on securities  generally  when the Adviser
believes that the premium received by the Fund, plus anticipated appreciation in
the market  price of the  underlying  security up to the  exercise  price of the
option,  will be  greater  than  the  total  appreciation  in the  price  of the
security.  The  strategy  may be used to provide  limited  protection  against a
decrease in the market  price of the  security in an amount equal to the premium
received for writing the call option less any  transaction  costs.  Thus, if the
market price of the underlying security held by the Fund declines, the amount of
such  decline  will be  offset  wholly or in part by the  amount of the  premium
received by the Fund. If,  however,  there is an increase in the market price of
the underlying security and the option is exercised,  the Fund will be obligated
to sell the  security  at less  than its  market  value.  The Fund  gives up the
ability to sell the portfolio securities used to cover the call option while the
call option is outstanding.  Such securities may also be considered  illiquid in
the case of OTC  options  written  by the Fund,  to the extent  described  under
"Investment   Policies--Restricted  Securities  and  Illiquid  Investments"  and
therefore   subject  to  the  Fund's   limitation  on  investments  in  illiquid
securities.  In addition,  the Fund could lose the ability to  participate in an


                                       10
<PAGE>


increase in the value of such  securities  above the exercise  price of the call
option  because  such an increase  would  likely be offset by an increase in the
cost of closing  out the call  option (or could be negated if the buyer chose to
exercise  the call option at an exercise  price  below the  securities'  current
market value).

      The Fund may write put options.  A put option  gives the  purchaser of the
option the right to sell,  and the writer  (seller) the  obligation  to buy, the
underlying  security at the exercise price during the option period.  So long as
the obligation of the writer  continues,  the writer may be assigned an exercise
notice by the broker-dealer  through which such option was sold, requiring it to
make payment of the exercise price against delivery of the underlying  security.
The operation of put options in other  respects,  including  their related risks
and rewards,  is substantially  identical to that of call options.  The Fund may
write covered put options in  circumstances  when the Adviser  believes that the
market price of the  securities  will not decline below the exercise  price less
the premiums received. If the put option is not exercised, the Fund will realize
income in the amount of the premium  received.  This technique  could be used to
enhance current return during periods of market uncertainty.  The risk in such a
transaction  would be that the market  price of the  underlying  security  would
decline below the exercise price less the premiums  received,  in which case the
Fund would expect to suffer a loss.

      Currently, many options on equity securities are exchange-traded,  whereas
options  on  debt   securities   are   primarily   traded  on  the  OTC  market.
Exchange-traded  options  in the U.S.  are  issued  by a  clearing  organization
affiliated  with the  exchange on which the option is listed  which,  in effect,
guarantees completion of every exchange-traded option transaction.  In contrast,
OTC options are contracts between a Fund and the opposite party with no clearing
organization guarantee.  Thus, when a Fund purchases an OTC option, it relies on
the dealer from which it has  purchased  the OTC option to make or take delivery
of the securities  underlying  the option.  Failure by the dealer to do so would
result  in the loss of the  premium  paid by the Fund as well as the loss of the
expected benefit of the transaction.

      SPECIAL  CHARACTERISTICS  AND  RISKS  OF  OPTIONS  TRADING.  The  Fund may
effectively terminate its right or obligation under an option by entering into a
closing  transaction.  If the Fund wishes to terminate  its  obligation  to sell
securities  under a put or call option it has  written,  the Fund may purchase a
put or call option of the same series (that is, an option identical in its terms
to the call  option  previously  written);  this is known as a closing  purchase
transaction.  Conversely,  in order to  terminate  its right to purchase or sell
specified  securities  under a call or put option it has  purchased,  a Fund may
write an  option  of the same  series  as the  option  held;  this is known as a
closing sale  transaction.  Closing  transactions  essentially  permit a Fund to
realize  profits or limit losses on its options  positions prior to the exercise
or expiration of the option. Whether a profit or loss is realized from a closing
transaction  depends on the price movement of the  underlying  index or security
and the market value of the option.

      The value of an option  position  will reflect,  among other  things,  the
current  market  price  of the  underlying  security  or stock  index,  the time
remaining until expiration, the relationship of the exercise price to the market
price, the historical price volatility of the underlying security or stock index
and general market  conditions.  For this reason,  the successful use of options
depends  upon  the  Adviser's   ability  to  forecast  the  direction  of  price
fluctuations in the underlying  securities market or, in the case of stock index
options, fluctuations in the market sector represented by the index selected.

      Options  normally have  expiration  dates of up to nine months.  Unless an
option  purchased  by a Fund is  exercised  or unless a closing  transaction  is
effected with respect to that position, a loss will be realized in the amount of
the premium paid and any transaction costs.


                                       11
<PAGE>


      A  position  in an  exchange-listed  option  may be closed  out only on an
exchange that provides a secondary market for identical options.  The ability to
establish and close out positions on the exchanges is subject to the maintenance
of a liquid  secondary  market.  Although  the Fund intends to purchase or write
only  those  exchange-traded  options  for which  there  appears  to be a liquid
secondary  market,  there is no assurance  that a liquid  secondary  market will
exist for any particular option at any particular time. Closing transactions may
be effected  with respect to options  traded in the OTC markets  (currently  the
primary  markets for options on debt  securities)  only by negotiating  directly
with the other party to the option  contract  or in a  secondary  market for the
option if such market exists. Although the Fund will enter into OTC options only
with  dealers  that agree to enter into,  and that are expected to be capable of
entering into, closing  transactions with a Fund, there is no assurance that the
Fund will be able to  liquidate  an OTC option at a favorable  price at any time
prior to  expiration.  In the event of insolvency of the opposite  party, a Fund
may be unable to liquidate an OTC option. Accordingly, it may not be possible to
effect closing  transactions  with respect to certain  options,  with the result
that a Fund would have to exercise  those options that it has purchased in order
to realize any profit.  With respect to options written by a Fund, the inability
to enter into a closing  transaction  may result in material losses to the Fund.
For example, because a Fund must maintain a covered position with respect to any
call  option it writes,  that Fund may not sell the  underlying  assets  used to
cover an option  during  the  period it is  obligated  under  the  option.  This
requirement  may impair the Fund's ability to sell a portfolio  security or make
an investment at a time when such a sale or investment might be advantageous.

      The  Fund's  activities  in the  options  markets  may  result in a higher
portfolio turnover rate and additional brokerage costs; however, a Fund also may
save on  commissions  by using  options as a hedge rather than buying or selling
individual securities in anticipation or as a result of market movements.

      FUTURES  STRATEGIES.  The Fund may engage in futures strategies to attempt
to reduce the  overall  investment  risk that would  normally  be expected to be
associated with ownership of the securities in which it invests.

      The Fund may use interest rate futures  contracts and options thereon,  to
hedge the debt portion of its portfolio  against changes in the general level of
interest rates.  The Fund may purchase an interest rate futures contract when it
intends to purchase debt  securities  but has not yet done so. This strategy may
minimize  the effect of all or part of an increase in the market  price of those
securities because a rise in the price of the securities prior to their purchase
may  either be  offset  by an  increase  in the  value of the  futures  contract
purchased by a Fund or avoided by taking delivery of the debt  securities  under
the futures contract.  Conversely,  a fall in the market price of the underlying
debt  securities  may  result in a  corresponding  decrease  in the value of the
futures position.  A Fund may sell an interest rate futures contract in order to
continue to receive the income from a debt security,  while endeavoring to avoid
part or all of the  decline  in the  market  value of that  security  that would
accompany an increase in interest rates.

      The Fund may  purchase a call  option on a financial  futures  contract to
hedge against a market advance in debt securities that the Fund plans to acquire
at a future  date.  The Fund also may write  covered  call  options on financial
futures  contracts  as a partial  hedge  against a decline  in the price of debt
securities  held in the Fund's  portfolio  or purchase  put options on financial
futures  contracts  in order to hedge  against  a  decline  in the value of debt
securities held in the Fund's portfolio.

      The Fund will use futures  contracts  and options  thereon  solely in bona
fide hedging transactions or under other circumstances permitted by the CFTC and
will not enter into such investments for which the aggregate  initial margin and
premiums  exceed 5% of the Fund's total  assets.  This does not limit the Fund's
assets at risk to 5%. The Fund has represented the foregoing to the CFTC.


                                       12
<PAGE>


      FUTURES  GUIDELINES.  To the  extent  that the Fund  enters  into  futures
contracts  or options  thereon  other than for bona fide  hedging  purposes  (as
defined by the CFTC), (1) the aggregate  initial margin and premiums required to
establish these positions  (excluding the  in-the-money  amount for options that
are  in-the-money at the time of purchase) will not exceed 5% of the liquidation
value of the Fund's portfolio,  after taking into account unrealized profits and
losses on any  contracts  into which the Fund has entered.  This policy does not
limit a Fund's  assets  at risk to 5%.  The value of all  futures  sold will not
exceed the total market value of a Fund's portfolio.  In addition,  the Fund may
not purchase interest rate futures contracts if immediately thereafter more than
30% of its total assets would be so invested.

      SPECIAL  CHARACTERISTICS  AND RISKS OF FUTURES  TRADING.  No price is paid
upon  entering  into futures  contracts.  Instead,  upon entering into a futures
contract,  the Fund is required to deposit with their  custodian in a segregated
account in the name of the  futures  broker  through  which the  transaction  is
effected  an  amount  of cash,  U.S.  Government  securities  or  other  liquid,
high-grade debt instruments generally equal to 3%-5% of the contract value. This
amount is known as  "initial  margin."  When  writing a put or call  option on a
futures  contract,  margin also must be deposited in accordance  with applicable
exchange  rules.  Initial  margin on  futures  contracts  is in the  nature of a
performance  bond  or  good-faith  deposit  that  is  returned  to a  Fund  upon
termination of the  transaction,  assuming all obligations  have been satisfied.
Under certain circumstances,  such as periods of high volatility,  a Fund may be
required by an exchange to  increase  the level of its initial  margin  payment.
Additionally,  initial  margin  requirements  may be increased  generally in the
future by regulatory action.  Subsequent payments, called "variation margin," to
and  from the  broker,  are made on a daily  basis as the  value of the  futures
position varies,  a process known as "marking to market."  Variation margin does
not involve borrowing to finance the futures transactions, but rather represents
a daily  settlement of a Fund's  obligation to or from a clearing  organization.
The Fund is also obligated to make initial and variation margin payments when it
writes options on futures contracts.

      Holders and  writers of futures  positions  and options  thereon can enter
into offsetting closing transactions, similar to closing transactions on options
on securities,  by selling or purchasing,  respectively,  a futures  position or
options  position with the same terms as the position or option held or written.
Positions  in futures  contracts  and  options  thereon may be closed only on an
exchange  or board of trade  providing a  secondary  market for such  futures or
options.

      Under certain circumstances,  futures exchanges may establish daily limits
on the amount that the price of a futures  contract  or related  option may vary
either up or down from the previous day's settlement price. Once the daily limit
has been reached in a particular  contract,  no trades may be made that day at a
price beyond that limit.  The daily limit governs only price movements  during a
particular  trading day and therefore  does not limit  potential  losses because
prices could move to the daily limit for several  consecutive  trading days with
little or no trading and  thereby  prevent  prompt  liquidation  of  unfavorable
positions.  In such event, it may not be possible for a Fund to close a position
and, in the event of adverse price  movements such Fund would have to make daily
cash  payments of variation  margin  (except in the case of purchased  options).
However,  in the event  futures  contracts  have  been  used to hedge  portfolio
securities,  such  securities  will  not be  sold  until  the  contracts  can be
terminated.  In such circumstances,  an increase in the price of the securities,
if any,  may  partially or  completely  offset  losses on the futures  contract.
However,  there is no guarantee that the price of the securities  will, in fact,
correlate  with the price  movements in the contracts and thus provide an offset
to losses on the contracts.

      Successful use by the Fund of futures  contracts and related  options will
depend upon the Adviser's  ability to predict  movements in the direction of the
overall  securities and interest rate markets,  which requires  different skills
and techniques than predicting  changes in the prices of individual  securities.
Moreover,  futures  contracts  relate  not to the  current  price  level  of the
underlying instrument but to the anticipated levels at some point in the future.


                                       13
<PAGE>


There is, in addition,  the risk that the  movements in the price of the futures
contract or related  option will not  correlate  with the movements in prices of
the securities being hedged.  In addition,  if a Fund has insufficient  cash, it
may have to sell  assets  from its  portfolio  to meet  daily  variation  margin
requirements.  Any such  sale of assets  may or may not be made at  prices  that
reflect  the rising  market.  Consequently,  a Fund may need to sell assets at a
time  when such  sales are  disadvantageous  to that  Fund.  If the price of the
futures  contract or related  option moves more than the price of the underlying
securities,  a Fund  will  experience  either  a loss or a gain  on the  futures
contract  or  related  option,  that  may or may  not be  completely  offset  by
movements in the price of the securities that are the subject of the hedge.

      In addition to the possibility that there may be an imperfect correlation,
or no  correlation  at all,  between  price  movements in the futures or related
option  position and the  securities  being  hedged,  movements in the prices of
futures contracts and related options may not correlate perfectly with movements
in the  prices of the hedged  securities  because  of price  distortions  in the
futures market. As a result, a correct forecast of general market trends may not
result in successful  hedging  through the use of futures  contracts and related
options over the short term.

      Positions  in futures  contracts  may be closed out only on an exchange or
board of trade that  provides a secondary  market for such futures  contracts or
related  options.  Although  the Fund  intends to purchase  or sell  futures and
related options only on exchanges or boards of trade where there appears to be a
liquid secondary market, there is no assurance that such a market will exist for
any particular  contract or option at any particular time. In such event, it may
not be  possible  to close a futures  or option  position  and,  in the event of
adverse price movements,  a Fund would continue to be required to make variation
margin payments.

      Like options on  securities,  options on futures  contracts have a limited
life.  The ability to establish and close out options on futures will be subject
to the development and maintenance of liquid  secondary  markets on the relevant
exchanges or boards of trade.  There can be no certainty  that liquid  secondary
markets for all options on futures contracts will develop.

      Purchasers  of options on futures  contracts  pay a premium in cash at the
time of purchase. This amount and the transaction costs are all that is at risk.
Sellers of options on a futures contract,  however, must post initial margin and
are subject to additional margin calls that could be substantial in the event of
adverse price movements.  In addition,  although the maximum amount at risk when
the  Fund  purchases  an  option  is the  premium  paid for the  option  and the
transaction  costs, there may be circumstances when the purchase of an option on
a futures  contract would result in a loss to the Fund when the use of a futures
contract  would  not,  such as when  there is no  movement  in the  level of the
underlying stock index or the value of the securities being hedged.

      The Fund's  activities  in the  futures and  related  options  markets may
result in a higher portfolio  turnover rate and additional  transaction costs in
the form of added  brokerage  commissions;  however,  the Fund  also may save on
commissions  by using futures and related  options as a hedge rather than buying
or  selling  individual  securities  in  anticipation  or as a result  of market
movements.

                               PORTFOLIO TURNOVER

      Although  the  Fund  generally  will not  invest  for  short-term  trading
purposes,  portfolio securities may be sold without regard to the length of time
they  have  been  held  when,   in  the  opinion  of  the  Adviser,   investment
considerations  warrant such action.  Portfolio  turnover  rate is calculated by
dividing (1) the lesser of purchases  or sales of portfolio  securities  for the
fiscal  year by (2) the  monthly  average of the value of  portfolio  securities
owned  during the  fiscal  year.  A 100%  turnover  rate would  occur if all the
securities  in a  Fund's  portfolio,  with the  exception  of  securities  whose
maturities  at the time of  acquisition  were one  year or less,  were  sold and


                                       14
<PAGE>


either  repurchased  or  replaced  within  one year.  A high  rate of  portfolio
turnover (100% or more) generally leads to transaction costs and may result in a
greater number of taxable transactions. See "Allocation of Portfolio Brokerage."

      For the fiscal  years  ended  December  31, 1998 and 1999,  the  portfolio
turnover rate for the Fund was 172% and 205%, respectively.

                             INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

      The investment  restrictions set forth below have been adopted by the Fund
and, unless identified as non-fundamental  policies,  may not be changed without
the affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding  voting  securities of the
Fund.  As provided in the  Investment  Company  Act of 1940,  as amended  ("1940
Act"), a "vote of a majority of the outstanding  voting  securities of the Fund"
means the affirmative vote of the lesser of (1) more than 50% of the outstanding
shares  of the Fund or (2) 67% or more of the  shares of the Fund  present  at a
meeting,  if more than 50% of the  outstanding  shares  are  represented  at the
meeting in person or by proxy.  Except  with  respect to  borrowing,  changes in
values of a the  Fund's  assets  will not  cause a  violation  of the  following
investment  restrictions so long as percentage  restrictions are observed by the
Fund at the time it purchases any security.

      INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II will not:

      (1)  Borrow money  except for  temporary or  emergency  purposes  (not for
leveraging  or  investment)  in an amount not  exceeding  5% of the value of its
total  assets  (including  the amount  borrowed)  less  liabilities  (other than
borrowings).  Any  borrowings  that  exceed 5% of the value of the Fund's  total
assets by reason  of a  decline  in net  assets  will be  reduced  within  three
business  days to the extent  necessary to comply with the 5%  limitation.  This
policy  shall not  prohibit  deposits of assets to provide  margin or  guarantee
positions in connection with transactions in options, futures contracts,  swaps,
forward contracts, and other derivative instruments or the segregation of assets
in connection with such transactions.

      (2)  Issue senior securities.

      (3)  Make loans, except loans of portfolio  securities  (limited to 10% of
the Fund's total  assets),  provided such loans are at all times secured by cash
or equivalent collateral of no less than 100% by marking to market daily.

      (4)  With  respect  to  75% of  the  Fund's  total  assets,  purchase  the
securities of any issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
Government, its agencies or instrumentalities) if, as a result, (a) more than 5%
of the Fund's total assets would be invested in the  securities  of that issuer,
or (b) the Fund would hold more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of
that issuer. With respect to pre-refunded bonds, the Adviser considers an escrow
account to be the issuer of such bonds when the escrow account  consists  solely
of U.S.  Government  obligations  fully  substituted  for the  obligation of the
issuing municipality.

      (5)  Invest in any municipal  bonds unless they will be insured  municipal
bonds or unless they are already  insured under an insurance  policy obtained by
the issuer or underwriter thereof.

      (6)  Invest more than 25% of the  Fund's  total  assets  (taken at current
value) in the obligations of one or more issuers having their principal business
activities in the same industry.

      (7)  Buy  or  sell  real  estate  or  interests  in  real  estate  limited
partnerships,  although it may purchase and sell securities which are secured by
real estate or interests therein.


                                       15
<PAGE>


      (8)  Underwrite  any issue of  securities,  although the Fund may purchase
municipal  bonds  directly from the issuer  thereof for investment in accordance
with the Fund's investment objective, policy and limitations.

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

      (10) Purchase or sell portfolio  securities  from or to the Adviser or any
director, officer or Trustee thereof or of the Trust, as principals.

      (11) Invest in any  securities  of any issuer if, to the  knowledge of the
Fund, any officer,  director or Trustee of the Trust or of the Adviser owns more
than 1/2 of 1% of the outstanding  securities of such issuer, and such officers,
directors or Trustees who own more than 1/2 of 1% own in the aggregate more than
5% of the outstanding securities of such issuer.

      The  following  investment  restrictions  are not  fundamental  and may be
changed without shareholder approval. These investment restrictions provide that
the Fund will not:

      (1)  Purchase  any  security  if,  as a  result,  more than 15% of its net
assets would be invested in illiquid securities, including repurchase agreements
not entitling the holder to payment of principal and interest  within seven days
and any  securities  that  are  illiquid  by  virtue  of  legal  or  contractual
restrictions  on  resale  or the  absence  of a readily  available  market.  The
Trustees,  or  the  Fund's  investment  adviser  acting  pursuant  to  authority
delegated by the Trustees,  may determine that a readily available market exists
for  securities  eligible for resale  pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended,  or any other  applicable rule, and therefore that such
securities are not subject to the foregoing limitation.

      (2)  Purchase or sell physical commodities  unless acquired as a result of
ownership of securities  (but this  restriction  shall not prevent the Fund from
purchasing  or  selling  options,  futures  contracts,  caps,  floors  and other
derivative instruments, engaging in swap transactions or investing in securities
or other instruments backed by physical commodities).

      (3)  Enter into futures  contracts or options on futures  contracts  other
than for bona fide hedging  purposes  (as defined by the CFTC) if the  aggregate
initial margin and premiums required to establish these positions (excluding the
amount by which  options are  "in-the-money"  at the time of  purchase)  may not
exceed 5% of the liquidation  value of the Fund's  portfolio,  after taking into
account  unrealized  profits and unrealized losses on any contracts the Fund has
entered into.

      (4)  Pledge assets,  except  that the Fund may pledge its assets to secure
borrowings made in accordance with fundamental investment restriction (1) above,
provided the Fund maintains  asset coverage of at least 300% for pledged assets;
provided,  however,  this  limitation  will not prohibit  escrow,  collateral or
margin  arrangements  in  connection  with the  Fund's use of  options,  futures
contracts or options on futures contracts.

      (5)  Purchase securities  on margin,  except that the Fund may obtain such
short-term  credits as are  necessary  for the  clearance of  transactions,  and
provided  that  margin  payments  and other  deposits  made in  connection  with
transactions in options, futures contracts,  swaps, forward contracts, and other
derivative  instruments shall not be deemed to constitute  purchasing securities
on margin.


                                       16
<PAGE>


                              TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS

      The following table lists the Trustees and executive officers of the Fund,
their age,  business  address  and  principal  occupations  during the past five
years.  Unless  otherwise  noted,  an individual's  business  address is 95 Wall
Street, New York, New York 10005.

GLENN O. HEAD*+ (75), President andTrustee.  Chairman of the Board and Director,
Administrative  Data  Management  Corp.  ("ADM"),   First  Investors  Management
Company, Inc. ("FIMCO"), Executive Investors Management Company, Inc. ("EIMCO"),
First Investors Corporation ("FIC"), Executive Investors Corporation ("EIC") and
First Investors Consolidated Corporation ("FICC").

KATHRYN  S.  HEAD*+  (44),  Trustee,  581 Main  Street,  Woodbridge,  NJ  07095.
President and Director,  FICC, ADM and FIMCO; Vice President and Director,  FIC;
President and Chief Executive Officer, EIC; President and Director, EIMCO.

LARRY R. LAVOIE* (53), Trustee.  Assistant  Secretary,  ADM, EIC, EIMCO, FIAMCO,
FICC and FIMCO; President, FIAMCO; Secretary and General Counsel, FIC.

REX R. REED** (78),  Trustee,  259 Governors  Drive,  Kiawah  Island,  SC 29455.
Retired; formerly Senior Vice President, American Telephone & Telegraph Company.

HERBERT   RUBINSTEIN**  (79),  Trustee,   695  Charolais  Circle,   Edwards,  CO
81632-1136.  Retired; formerly President,  Belvac International Industries, Ltd.
and President, Central Dental Supply.

ROBERT GROHOL** (68), Trustee,  263 Woodland Road,  Madison, NJ 07940.  Retired;
formerly Senior Vice President-Operating of Beneficial Management Corporation of
America's Gulf Coast, Northwest and Southern groups.

JAMES M. SRYGLEY** (68), Trustee, 39 Hampton Road, Chatham, NJ 07928. Principal,
Hampton Properties, Inc. (property investment company).

JOHN T. SULLIVAN* (68), Trustee and Chairman of the Board; Director, FIMCO, FIC,
FICC and ADM; Of Counsel, Hawkins, Delafield & Wood, Attorneys.

ROBERT F. WENTWORTH** (71), Trustee,  217 Upland Downs Road,  Manchester Center,
VT 05255.  Retired;  formerly  financial  and planning  executive  with American
Telephone & Telegraph Company.

JOSEPH I. BENEDEK (43),  Treasurer and Principal  Accounting  Officer,  581 Main
Street, Woodbridge, NJ 07095. Treasurer, FIMCO, EIMCO and FIAMCO.

CONCETTA DURSO (64), Vice President and Secretary. Vice President,  FIMCO, EIMCO
and ADM; Assistant Vice President and Assistant Secretary, FIC and EIC.

CLARK D. WAGNER (41), Vice President.  Vice  President,  First Investors  Series
Fund,  First  Investors  Insured  Tax  Exempt  Fund II,  Inc.,  First  Investors
Multi-State  Insured Tax Free Fund,  First  Investors  New York Insured Tax Free
Fund, Inc., Executive Investors Trust and First Investors Government Fund, Inc.;
Chief Investment Officer, FIMCO.

----------------------
* These Trustees may be deemed to be "interested persons," as defined in the
  1940 Act.
**These Trustees are members of the Board's Audit Committee.
+ Mr. Glenn O. Head and Ms. Kathryn S. Head are father and daughter.


                                       17
<PAGE>


      The Trustees and officers, as a group, owned less than 1% of shares of any
Fund.

      All of the officers and Trustees, except for Mr. Wagner, hold identical or
similar  positions with the other registered  investment  companies in the First
Investors  Family of Funds. Mr. Head is also an officer and/or Director of First
Investors  Asset  Management  Company,  Inc.,  First  Investors  Credit  Funding
Corporation,  First  Investors  Leverage  Corporation,  First  Investors  Realty
Company, Inc., First Investors Resources, Inc., N.A.K. Realty Corporation,  Real
Property Development Corporation,  Route 33 Realty Corporation,  First Investors
Life Insurance Company,  First Financial Savings Bank,  S.L.A.,  First Investors
Credit Corporation and School Financial  Management  Services,  Inc. Ms. Head is
also an officer and/or Director of First Investors Life Insurance Company, First
Investors  Credit  Corporation,  First Financial  Savings Bank,  S.L.A.,  School
Financial Management Services, Inc., First Investors Credit Funding Corporation,
N.A.K.  Realty  Corporation,   Real  Property  Development  Corporation,   First
Investors Leverage Corporation and Route 33 Realty Corporation.

      The following table lists  compensation  paid to the Trustees of the Trust
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1999.

                                AGGREGATE         TOTAL
                                COMPENSATION      COMPENSATION
                                FROM TRUST FOR    FROM FIRST
 TRUSTEE                        THE FUND*         INVESTORS FAMILY OF
 -------                        ---------         FUNDS PAID TO
                                                  TRUSTEE*+
                                                  ---------

James J. Coy**                       $-0-                 $-0-
Glenn O. Head                        $-0-                 $-0-
Kathryn S. Head                      $-0-                 $-0-
Larry R. Lavoie                      $-0-                 $-0-
Rex R. Reed                          $60               $42,950
Herbert Rubinstein                   $60               $42,950
James M. Srygley                     $60               $42,950
John T. Sullivan                     $-0-                 $-0-
Robert F. Wentworth                  $60               $42,950
Robert Grohol***                      $0                    $0

---------------------
*   Compensation to officers and interested Trustees of the Trust is paid by the
    Adviser.
**  On March 27,  1997,  Mr. Coy  resigned  as a Trustee of the Trust.  Mr. Coy
    currently  serves as an Emeritus  Trustee.  Mr. Coy is paid by the Adviser.
*** Mr.  Grohol  was  appointed  as a  Trustee  on June 15,  2000.  + The  First
    Investors  Family of Funds  consists  of 15 separate  registered  investment
    companies.  The total  compensation  shown in this  column is for the twelve
    month period ended December 31, 1999.

                                   MANAGEMENT

      Investment  advisory  services to the Fund are provided by First Investors
Management Company,  Inc. ("FIMCO") pursuant to an Investment Advisory Agreement
("Advisory  Agreement") dated June 13, 1994.

      The Advisory Agreement was approved by the Board of the Trust, including a
majority of the Trustees who are not parties to the Fund's Advisory Agreement or
"interested   persons"   (as  defined  in  the  1940  Act)  of  any  such  party
("Independent  Trustees"),  in person at a meeting called for such purpose.  The
Board of Trustees is responsible for overseeing the management of the Fund.

      Pursuant to the Advisory  Agreement,  FIMCO shall supervise and manage the
Fund's  investments,  determine the Fund's portfolio  transactions and supervise


                                       18
<PAGE>


all aspects of the Fund's operations, subject to review by the Trust's Trustees.
The Advisory  Agreement  also  provides  that FIMCO shall  provide the Fund with
certain executive,  administrative and clerical personnel, office facilities and
supplies, conduct the business and details of the operation of the Trust and the
Fund and assume certain expenses thereof,  other than obligations or liabilities
of the Fund. The Advisory  Agreement may be terminated at any time, with respect
to the Fund,  without  penalty by the  Trust's  Trustees or by a majority of the
outstanding  voting securities of the Fund, or by FIMCO, in each instance on not
less than 60 days'  written  notice,  and shall  automatically  terminate in the
event of its  assignment  (as defined in the 1940 Act).  The Advisory  Agreement
also provides that it will continue in effect,  with respect to the Fund,  for a
period of over two years only if such continuance is approved annually either by
the Trust's  Trustees or by a majority of the outstanding  voting  securities of
the  Fund,  and,  in  either  case,  by a vote  of a  majority  of  the  Trust's
Independent  Trustees  voting in person at a meeting  called for the  purpose of
voting on such approval.

      Under the  Advisory  Agreement,  the Fund pays the  Adviser an annual fee,
paid monthly, according to the following schedules:

                                                                          Annual
AVERAGE DAILY NET ASSETS                                                   RATE
------------------------                                                  ------

Up to $200 million....................................................    1.00%
In excess of $200 million up to $500 million..........................    0.75
In excess of $500 million up to $750 million..........................    0.72
In excess of $750 million up to $1.0 billion..........................    0.69
Over $1.0 billion.....................................................    0.66


      Prior to December 18, 2000, Executive Investors  Management Company,  Inc.
("EIMCO")  served as  investment  adviser to the Fund.  FIMCO and EIMCO are both
wholly owned subsidiaries of First Investors Consolidated Corporation, and their
address is also 95 Wall  Street,  New York,  NY 10005.  On December 18, 2000 the
Advisory  Agreement was transferred from EIMCO to FIMCO with the approval of the
Fund's Board of Trustees.

      For the  fiscal  years  ended  December  31,  1997,  1998 and 1999,  EIMCO
received  advisory  fees for its  services of $156,479,  $167,864 and  $167,999,
respectively.  Of such amounts, EIMCO voluntarily waived $117,359,  $120,222 and
$117,599,  respectively.  For the fiscal years ended December 31, 1998 and 1999,
EIMCO  voluntarily  assumed  expenses for the Fund in the amounts of $21,698 and
$22,985, respectively.

      The Adviser has an Investment Committee composed of Dennis T. Fitzpatrick,
George V. Ganter, Michael Deneka, David Hanover, Glenn O. Head, Kathryn S. Head,
Nancy W. Jones, Michael O'Keefe, Patricia D. Poitra, Clark D. Wagner and Matthew
Wright.  The Committee  usually meets weekly to discuss the  composition  of the
portfolio  of the  Fund  and to  review  additions  to and  deletions  from  the
portfolio.

      The Fund bears all expenses of its operations other than those incurred by
the  Adviser or  Underwriter  under the terms of its  advisory  or  underwriting
agreements.  Fund  expenses  include,  but are not limited to: the advisory fee;
shareholder servicing fees and expenses;  custodian fees and expenses; legal and
auditing fees;  expenses of  communicating to existing  shareholders,  including
preparing,  printing and mailing  prospectuses  and shareholder  reports to such
shareholders; and proxy and shareholder meeting expenses.

      First  Investors  Consolidated   Corporation  ("FICC")  owns  all  of  the
outstanding stock of the Adviser,  First Investors  Corporation,  and the Fund's
transfer  agent.  Mr. Glenn O. Head controls FICC and,  therefore,  controls the
Adviser.


                                       19
<PAGE>


                                   UNDERWRITER

      The  Trust  has  entered  into an  Underwriting  Agreement  ("Underwriting
Agreement")  with First  Investors  Corporation  ("Underwriter"  or "FIC") which
requires the Underwriter to use its best efforts to sell shares of the Fund. The
Underwriting  Agreement was approved by the Trust's Board,  including a majority
of the Independent  Trustees.  The Underwriting  Agreement provides that it will
continue in effect from year to year,  with respect to the Fund, only so long as
such continuance is specifically approved at least annually by the Trust's Board
or by a vote of a majority of the  outstanding  voting  securities of such Fund,
and in  either  case  by the  vote  of a  majority  of the  Trust's  Independent
Trustees, voting in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such
approval. The Underwriting  Agreement will terminate  automatically in the event
of its assignment.

      Prior to December 18, 2000, Executive Investors Corporation ("EIC") served
as the principal  underwriter  for the Fund. EIC is an affiliate of FIC. For the
fiscal year ended December 31, 1997, the Fund paid EIC underwriting  commissions
of  $6,680.  For the  same  period,  EIC  reallowed  an  additional  $28,463  to
unaffiliated  dealers and $5,596 to FIC. For the fiscal year ended  December 31,
1998, the Fund paid EIC underwriting commissions of $9,625. For the same period,
EIC reallowed an additional  $76,513 to unaffiliated  dealers and $1,494 to FIC.
For the fiscal year ended  December  31,  1999,  the Fund paid EIC  underwriting
commissions of $6,072.  For the same period, EIC reallowed an additional $31,856
to unaffiliated dealers and $6,388 to FIC.

                               DISTRIBUTION PLANS

      As  stated  in the  Fund's  Prospectus,  pursuant  to a  separate  plan of
distribution  for each  class of shares  adopted by the Trust  pursuant  to Rule
12b-1 under the 1940 Act  ("Class A Plan" and "Class B Plan" and,  collectively,
"Plans"),  the Fund is  authorized  to compensate  the  Underwriter  for certain
expenses  incurred in the distribution of the Fund's shares and the servicing or
maintenance of existing Fund shareholder accounts.

      Each Plan was  approved by the Fund's  Board,  including a majority of the
Independent Trustees,  and by a majority of the outstanding voting securities of
the relevant  class of the Fund.  Each Plan will continue in effect from year to
year, as long as its continuance is approved  annually by either the Board or by
a vote of a majority of the outstanding  voting securities of the relevant class
of shares of the Fund. In either case,  to continue,  each Plan must be approved
by the  vote of a  majority  of the  Independent  Trustees.  The  Board  reviews
quarterly and annually a written report provided by the Treasurer of the amounts
expended under the applicable Plan and the purposes for which such  expenditures
were made.  While each Plan is in effect,  the selection  and  nomination of the
Independent  Directors will be committed to the  discretion of such  Independent
Trustees then in office.

      Each Plan can be  terminated  at any time by a vote of a  majority  of the
Independent  Trustees  or by a vote  of a  majority  of the  outstanding  voting
securities of the relevant  class of shares of the Fund.  Any change to any Plan
that would materially increase the costs to that class of shares of the Fund may
not be instituted  without the approval of the outstanding  voting securities of
the class of shares  of the Fund as well as any  class of shares  that  converts
into that  class.  Such  changes  also  require  approval  by a majority  of the
Independent Trustees.

      In adopting each Plan, the Board  considered all relevant  information and
determined that there is a reasonable likelihood that each Plan will benefit the
Fund and its class of  shareholders.  The Board  believes that the amounts spent
pursuant to each Plan will assist the Fund in  providing  ongoing  servicing  to
shareholders,  in competing  with other  providers of financial  services and in
promoting sales, thereby increasing the net assets of the Fund.


                                       20
<PAGE>


      In reporting amounts expended under the Plans to the Trustees,  FIMCO will
allocate expenses attributable to the sale of each class of the Fund's shares to
such  class  based on the  ratio of  sales  of such  class to the  sales of both
classes of shares.  The fees paid by one class of the Fund's  shares will not be
used to subsidize the sale of any other class of the Fund's shares.

      Prior to December  18, 2000,  the Fund had only one class of  undesignated
shares and had adopted a plan of  distribution  pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the
1940 Act with  respect  to that  single  class of  shares  (the  "Old  Plan") to
compensate EIC for certain  expenses  incurred in the distribution of the shares
and the servicing or maintenance of Fund  shareholder  accounts.  For the fiscal
year ended  December 31, 1999, the Fund paid $67,199 in fees pursuant to the Old
Plan. For the same period,  EIC waived an additional $16,800 in fees pursuant to
the Old Plan.  For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1999, the EIC incurred the
following expenses related to the Old Plan with respect to the Fund:

                             COMPENSATION TO   COMPENSATION TO   COMPENSATION TO
                               UNDERWRITER         DEALERS       SALES PERSONNEL
                               -----------         -------       ---------------

INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II         27,737                $0            $39,462


DEALER CONCESSIONS. With respect to Class A shares of the Fund, the Fund will
reallow a portion of the sales load to the dealers selling the shares as shown
in the following table:

                                       SALES CHARGES AS % OF       CONCESSION TO
                                     OFFERING     NET AMOUNT     DEALERS AS % OF
AMOUNT OF INVESTMENT                   PRICE       INVESTED       OFFERING PRICE
--------------------                   -----       --------       --------------
Less than $25,000                      6.25%         6.67%             5.13%
$25,000 but under $50,000              5.75          6.10              4.72
$50,000 but under $100,000             5.50          5.82              4.51
$100,000 but under $250,000            4.50          4.71              3.69
$250,000 but under $500,000            3.50          3.63              2.87
$500,000 but under $1,000,000          2.50          2.56              2.05


DEALER CONCESSIONS. With respect to Class A shares of the Fund, by investors who
were shareholders prior to December 18, 2000, the Fund will reallow a portion of
the sales load to the dealers selling the shares as shown in the following
table:

                                       SALES CHARGES AS % OF       CONCESSION TO
                                     OFFERING     NET AMOUNT     DEALERS AS % OF
AMOUNT OF INVESTMENT                   PRICE       INVESTED       OFFERING PRICE
--------------------                   -----       --------       --------------
Less than $100,000                     4.75          4.99              4.27
$100,000 but under $250,000            3.90          4.06              3.51
$250,000 but under $500,000            2.90          2.99              2.61
$500,000 but under $1,000,000          2.40          2.46              2.16


                        DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

      Except as provided  herein,  a security listed or traded on an exchange or
the  Nasdaq  Stock  Market is valued at its last sale price on the  exchange  or
market  where the  security is  principally  traded,  and lacking any sales on a
particular  day,  the security is valued at the mean between the closing bid and
asked prices.  Securities traded in the OTC market (including  securities listed
on exchanges  whose primary market is believed to be OTC) are valued at the mean
between the last bid and asked  prices  prior to the time when assets are valued
based upon quotes  furnished by market makers for such  securities.  However,  a
Fund may determine the value of debt securities  based upon prices  furnished by
an outside  pricing  service.  The pricing  services are provided to the Fund by
Muller Data  Corporation.  The pricing  services use  quotations  obtained  from
investment  dealers or brokers for the particular  securities  being  evaluated,
information  with respect to market  transactions  in comparable  securities and
consider security type, rating, market condition, yield data and other available
information in determining  value.  Short-term debt securities that mature in 60
days or  less  are  valued  at  amortized  cost.  Securities  for  which  market
quotations  are not readily  available are valued on at fair value as determined
in good faith by or under the  supervision  of the Trust's  officers in a manner
specifically authorized by the Board of the Trust.

      "When-issued securities" are reflected in the assets of the Fund as of the
date the securities are purchased. Such investments are valued thereafter at the
mean  between  the most recent bid and asked  prices  obtained  from  recognized
dealers in such securities or by the pricing services.

      The Fund may retain any insured  municipal bond which is in default in the
payment of  principal  or interest  until the  default  has been  cured,  or the


                                       21
<PAGE>


principal and interest  outstanding  are paid by an insurer or the issuer of any
letter of credit or other  guarantee  supporting  such  municipal  bond. In such
case, it is the Fund's  policy to value the defaulted  bond daily based upon the
value of a comparable  bond which is insured and not in default.  In selecting a
comparable bond, the Fund will consider security type, rating,  market condition
and yield.

      The Board may suspend the  determination of the Fund's net asset value for
the whole or any part of any  period (1)  during  which  trading on the New York
Stock  Exchange  ("NYSE") is  restricted as determined by the SEC or the NYSE is
closed  for other  than  weekend  and  holiday  closings,  (2)  during  which an
emergency,  as  defined  by rules of the SEC in  respect  to the  United  States
market, exists as a result of which disposal by a Fund of securities owned by it
is not reasonably  practicable for the Fund fairly to determine the value of its
net assets, or (3) for such other period as the SEC has by order permitted.

      EMERGENCY  PRICING  PROCEDURES.  In the  event  that  the Fund  must  halt
operations  during any day that they would  normally  be required to price under
Rule 22c-1 under the 1940 Act due to an emergency  ("Emergency Closed Day"), the
Funds will apply the following procedures:

      1.   The  Fund will make  every  reasonable  effort  to  segregate  orders
received  on the  Emergency  Closed  Day and give them the price that they would
have  received  but for the  closing.  The  Emergency  Closed  Day price will be
calculated  as soon as  practicable  after  operations  have resumed and will be
applied equally to sales, redemptions and repurchases that were in fact received
in the mail or otherwise on the Emergency Closed Day.

      2.   For  purposes of  paragraph  1, an  order will be deemed to have been
received by the Fund on an  Emergency  Closed Day,  even if neither the Fund nor
the Transfer  Agent is able to perform the  mechanical  processing of pricing on
that day, under the following circumstances:

                  (a) In the case of a mail order the order  will be  considered
received by a Fund when the postal service has delivered it to FIC's  Woodbridge
offices prior to the close of regular trading on the NYSE; and

                  (b) In the case of a wire order,  including a Fund/SERV order,
the order will be considered  received when it is received in good form by a FIC
branch office or an authorized  dealer prior to the close of regular  trading on
the NYSE.

      3.   If  the Fund is unable to segregate  orders received on the Emergency
Closed Day from those  received  on the next day the Fund is open for  business,
the Fund may give all orders the next price calculated after operations resume.

      4.   Notwithstanding  the foregoing, on business days in which the NYSE is
not open for regular trading,  the Fund may determine not to price its portfolio
securities  if such prices would lead to a  distortion  of the NAV, for the Fund
and its shareholders.

                        ALLOCATION OF PORTFOLIO BROKERAGE

         The Adviser may purchase or sell portfolio  securities on behalf of the
Fund in agency or  principal  transactions.  In  agency  transactions,  the Fund
generally  pays  brokerage  commissions.  In  principal  transactions,  the Fund
generally does not pay commissions,  however the price paid for the security may
include an undisclosed  dealer  commission or "mark-up" or selling  concessions.
The  Adviser  normally  purchases  fixed-income  securities  on a net basis from
primary market makers acting as principals for the  securities.  The Adviser may
purchase certain money market instruments directly from an issuer without paying
commissions or discounts. The Adviser may also purchase securities traded in the
OTC market.  As a general  practice,  OTC securities are usually  purchased from
market makers  without  paying  commissions,  although the price of the security


                                       22
<PAGE>


usually will include undisclosed compensation.  However, when it is advantageous
to the Fund the Adviser may utilize a broker to purchase OTC  securities and pay
a commission.

         In purchasing and selling  portfolio  securities on behalf of the Fund,
the Adviser will seek to obtain best  execution.  The Fund may pay more than the
lowest  available  commission  in return for  brokerage  and research  services.
Additionally,  upon  instruction  by the  Board,  the  Adviser  may  use  dealer
concessions   available   in   fixed-priced   underwritings,    over-the-counter
transactions,  and/or brokerage to pay for research and other services. Research
and other services may include  information as to the availability of securities
for purchase or sale,  statistical or factual information or opinions pertaining
to   securities,   reports   and   analysis   concerning   issuers   and   their
creditworthiness,  and  Lipper's  Directors'  Analytical  Data  concerning  Fund
performance and fees. The Adviser generally uses the research and other services
to service all the funds in the First Investors Family of Funds, rather than the
particular  Funds whose  commissions may pay for research or other services.  In
other words, a Fund's  brokerage may be used to pay for a research  service that
is used in managing  another Fund within the First  Investor  Fund  Family.  The
Lipper's Directors' Analytical Data is used by the Adviser and the Fund Board to
analyze a fund's performance relative to other comparable funds.

         In  selecting  the  broker-dealers  to  execute  the  Fund's  portfolio
transactions,  the  Adviser  may  consider  such  factors  as the  price  of the
security, the rate of the commission,  the size and difficulty of the order, the
trading  characteristics of the security  involved,  the difficulty in executing
the order, the research and other services provided,  the expertise,  reputation
and reliability of the broker-dealer, access to new offerings, and other factors
bearing upon the quality of the execution.  The Adviser does not place portfolio
orders with an affiliated broker, or allocate brokerage  commission  business to
any  broker-dealer  for  distributing  fund shares.  Moreover,  no broker-dealer
affiliated with the Adviser  participates in commissions  generated by portfolio
orders placed on behalf of the Fund.

      The Adviser may combine  transaction  orders placed on behalf of the Fund,
other  funds in the First  Investors  Group of Funds and  First  Investors  Life
Insurance  Company,  affiliates  of the Funds,  for the  purpose of  negotiating
brokerage commissions or obtaining a more favorable transaction price; and where
appropriate,  securities  purchased or sold may be allocated in accordance  with
written  procedures  approved by the Board. The Trust's Board has authorized and
directed  the  Adviser  to  use  dealer  concessions  available  in  fixed-price
underwritings  of  municipal  bonds  to pay  for  research  services  which  are
beneficial in the management of the Fund's portfolio.

      For the fiscal years ended December 31, 1997,  1998 and 1999, the Fund did
not pay brokerage commissions.

                   PURCHASE, REDEMPTION AND EXCHANGE OF SHARES

      Information regarding the purchase, redemption and exchange of Fund shares
is contained in the Shareholder  Manual, a separate section of the SAI that is a
distinct document and may be obtained free of charge by contacting your Fund.

      REDEMPTIONS-IN  KIND.  If the  Board  should  determine  that it  would be
detrimental  to the best  interests of the remaining  shareholders  of a Fund to
make payment wholly or partly in cash,  the Fund may pay redemption  proceeds in
whole or in part by a distribution  in kind of securities  from the portfolio of
the Fund. If shares are redeemed in kind, the redeeming  shareholder will likely
incur  brokerage costs in converting the assets into cash. The method of valuing
portfolio  securities for this purpose is described under  "Determination of Net
Asset Value."


                                       23
<PAGE>


                                      TAXES

      To continue to qualify for  treatment  as a regulated  investment  company
("RIC") under the Code, the Fund must  distribute to its  shareholders  for each
taxable year at least 90% of the sum of its  investment  company  taxable income
(consisting  generally  of taxable  net  investment  income  and net  short-term
capital gain) plus its net interest  income  excludable  from gross income under
section 103(a) of the Code  ("Distribution  Requirement")  and must meet several
additional requirements.  These requirements include the following: (1) the Fund
must derive at least 90% of its gross income each  taxable year from  dividends,
interest,  payments with respect to securities  loans and gains from the sale or
other disposition of securities or other income (including gains from options or
futures  contracts)  derived  with  respect  to its  business  of  investing  in
securities  ("Income  Requirement");  (2) at the  close of each  quarter  of the
Fund's  taxable  year,  at least 50% of the value of its  total  assets  must be
represented by cash and cash items, U.S.  Government  securities,  securities of
other RICs and other securities, with those other securities limited, in respect
of any one  issuer,  to an amount  that  does not  exceed 5% of the value of the
Fund's total assets;  and (3) at the close of each quarter of the Fund's taxable
year,  not more than 25% of the value of its total  assets  may be  invested  in
securities  (other than U.S.  Government  securities or the  securities of other
RICs) of any one issuer.

      Dividends paid by the Fund will qualify as "exempt-interest  dividends" as
defined in the  Prospectus,  and thus will be  excludable  from gross income for
Federal  income tax  purposes by its  shareholders,  if the Fund  satisfies  the
requirement that, at the close of each quarter of its taxable year, at least 50%
of the value of its total assets consists of securities the interest on which is
excludable from gross income under section 103(a);  the Fund intends to continue
to satisfy this requirement.  The aggregate dividends excludable from the Fund's
shareholders'   gross  income  may  not  exceed  its  net   tax-exempt   income.
Shareholders'  treatment of dividends from the Fund under state and local income
tax laws may differ from the treatment thereof under the Code.  Investors should
consult their tax advisers concerning this matter.

      If Fund shares are sold at a loss after being held for six months or less,
the loss  will be  disallowed  to the  extent of any  exempt-interest  dividends
received on those  shares,  and any portion of the loss not  disallowed  will be
treated as described above.

      Tax-exempt interest attributable to certain PABs (including, to the extent
the  Fund  receives  interest  on  those  bonds,  a  proportionate  part  of the
exempt-interest  dividends it pays) is a Tax  Preference  Item.  Exempt-interest
dividends received by a corporate  shareholder also may be indirectly subject to
the  Federal  alternative  minimum  tax  without  regard to  whether  the Fund's
tax-exempt  interest was attributable to those bonds.  Entities or other persons
who are  "substantial  users" (or  persons  related to  "substantial  users") of
facilities  financed by PABs should consult their tax advisers before purchasing
shares  of the Fund  because,  for users of  certain  of these  facilities,  the
interest  on those  bonds is not  exempt  from  Federal  income  tax.  For these
purposes,  the term  "substantial  user"  is  defined  generally  to  include  a
"non-exempt person" who regularly uses in trade or business a part of a facility
financed from the proceeds of PABs.

      Up to 85% of social security and certain railroad  retirement benefits may
be included in taxable  income for  recipients  whose  modified  adjusted  gross
income (which includes income from tax-exempt sources such as the Fund) plus 50%
of their benefits exceeds certain base amounts.  Exempt-interest  dividends from
the Fund still are tax-exempt to the extent  described in the  Prospectus;  they
are only included in the calculation of whether a recipient's income exceeds the
established amounts.

      The Fund may acquire zero coupon or other securities  issued with original
issue discount ("OID").  As a holder of those securities,  the Fund must account
for the  portion of the OID that  accrues on the  securities  during the taxable
year,  even if the Fund  receives  no  corresponding  payment on them during the
year.  Because  the  Fund  annually  must  distribute  substantially  all of its
investment  company  taxable income and net tax-exempt  interest,  including any


                                       24
<PAGE>


OID, to satisfy the Distribution Requirement, it may be required in a particular
year to distribute as a dividend an amount that is greater than the total amount
of cash it actually receives.  Those  distributions will be made from the Fund's
cash assets or from the proceeds of sales of portfolio securities, if necessary.
The Fund may  realize  capital  gains or losses  from those  sales,  which would
increase or decrease its  investment  company  taxable income and/or net capital
gain.

      The Fund may invest in municipal  bonds that are purchased,  generally not
on their original issue, with market discount (that is, at a price less than the
principal amount of the bond or, in the case of a bond that was issued with OID,
a price less than the amount of the issue price plus  accrued  OID)  ("municipal
market discount bonds").  Gain on the disposition of a municipal market discount
bond  (other  than a bond with a fixed  maturity  date  within one year from its
issuance),  generally  is treated as  ordinary  (taxable)  income,  rather  than
capital gain, to the extent of the bond's accrued market discount at the time of
disposition.  Market discount on such a bond generally is accrued ratably,  on a
daily basis,  over the period from the acquisition date to the date of maturity.
In lieu of treating the disposition gain as above, the Fund may elect to include
market discount in its gross income currently, for each taxable year to which it
is attributable.

      If the Fund invests in any instruments  that generate taxable income under
the  circumstances  described in the Prospectus,  distributions  of the interest
earned  thereon will be taxable to its  shareholders  as ordinary  income to the
extent of its earnings and profits.  Moreover, if the Fund realizes capital gain
as a result  of  market  transactions,  any  distributions  of that gain will be
taxable to its  shareholders.  There also may be collateral  Federal  income tax
consequences regarding the receipt of exempt-interest  dividends by shareholders
such  as S  corporations,  financial  institutions  and  property  and  casualty
insurance companies. A shareholder falling into any such category should consult
its tax adviser concerning its investment in shares of the Fund.

      By qualifying for treatment as a RIC, the Fund (but not its  shareholders)
will be relieved  of federal  income tax on the part of its  investment  company
taxable income and net capital gain (i.e.,  the excess of net long-term  capital
gain over net short-term  capital loss) that it distributes to its shareholders.
If the Fund failed to qualify for treatment as a RIC for any taxable  year,  (1)
it would be taxed as an ordinary  corporation  on the full amount of its taxable
income for that year without being able to deduct the  distributions it makes to
its shareholders and (2) the shareholders  would treat all those  distributions,
including  distributions  that otherwise  would be  "exempt-interest  dividends"
described in the following  paragraph and  distributions of net capital gain, as
taxable  dividends  (that is,  ordinary  income)  to the  extent  of the  Fund's
earnings  and  profits.  In  addition,  the Fund could be required to  recognize
unrealized  gains,  pay  substantial  taxes and  interest  and make  substantial
distributions before requalifying for RIC treatment.

      Dividends  and  other  distributions  declared  by the  Fund  in  October,
November or December of any year and payable to shareholders of record on a date
in any of those  months are deemed to have been paid by the Fund and received by
the  shareholders on December 31 of that year if the  distributions  are paid by
the Fund during the following January. Accordingly,  those distributions will be
reported by, in the case of  exempt-interest  dividends (see below), and will be
taxed to shareholders for the year in which that December 31 falls.

      If Fund shares are sold at a loss after being held for six months or less,
the loss will be treated as long-term,  instead of  short-term,  capital loss to
the extent of any capital gain distributions received on those shares.

      The Fund will be subject to a  nondeductible  4% excise tax ("Excise Tax")
to the  extent  it  fails  to  distribute  by  the  end  of  any  calendar  year
substantially  all of its  ordinary  (taxable)  income for that year and capital
gain net income for the one-year  period ending on October 31 of that year, plus
certain other amounts.


                                       25
<PAGE>


      The use of hedging  strategies,  such as writing  (selling) and purchasing
options and futures  contracts,  involves  complex rules that will determine for
income tax purposes the amount, character and timing of recognition of the gains
and losses the Fund will realize in connection therewith. Gains from options and
futures  contracts derived by the Fund with respect to its business of investing
in securities will be treated as qualifying income under the Income Requirement.

      If the  Fund has an  "appreciated  financial  position"  -  generally,  an
interest  (including an interest  through an option,  futures  contract or short
sale) with respect to any stock, debt instrument (other than "straight debt") or
partnership interest the fair market value of which exceeds its adjusted basis -
and enters into a "constructive sale" of the position,  the Fund will be treated
as  having  made an  actual  sale  thereof,  with the  result  that gain will be
recognized at that time. A constructive sale generally consists of a short sale,
an offsetting  notional  principal  contract or futures contract entered into by
the Fund or a related person with respect to the same or substantially identical
property.  In addition,  if the appreciated financial position is itself a short
sale or such a contract, acquisition of the underlying property or substantially
identical  property will be deemed a  constructive  sale. The foregoing will not
apply,  however, to any transaction during any taxable year that otherwise would
be treated as a  constructive  sale if the  transaction is closed within 30 days
after the end of that year and the Fund holds the appreciated financial position
unhedged  for 60 days after that  closing  (i.e.,  at no time during that 60-day
period is the Fund's risk of loss regarding  that position  reduced by reason of
certain  specified  transactions  with  respect to  substantially  identical  or
related  property,  such as  having  an  option  to  sell,  being  contractually
obligated  to  sell,   making  a  short  sale  or  granting  an  option  to  buy
substantially identical stock or securities).

                             PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

      The Fund may advertise its performance in various ways.

      The Fund's  "average  annual  total  return"  ("T") is an  average  annual
compounded  rate of return.  The  calculation  produces an average  annual total
return  for the  number of years  measured.  It is the rate of  return  based on
factors which include a hypothetical  initial  investment of $1,000 ("P") over a
number  of  years  ("n")  with  an  Ending  Redeemable  Value  ("ERV")  of  that
investment, according to the following formula:


                  T=[(ERV/P)^(1/n)]-1

      The "total return" uses the same factors, but does not average the rate of
return on an annual basis. Total return is determined as follows:


                  (ERV-P)/P  = TOTAL RETURN

      Total return is  calculated  by finding the average  annual  change in the
value of an initial $1,000 investment over the period. In calculating the ending
redeemable value for Fund shares, the Fund will deduct the maximum current sales
charge of 6.25% (as a percentage of the offering  price) from the initial $1,000
payment.  All  dividends  and  other  distributions  are  assumed  to have  been
reinvested at net asset value on the initial investment ("P").


      Return  information  may be useful to investors  in  reviewing  the Fund's
performance.  However, certain factors should be taken into account before using
this  information as a basis for comparison  with  alternative  investments.  No
adjustment is made for taxes  payable on  distributions.  Return will  fluctuate
over  time  and  return  for any  given  past  period  is not an  indication  or
representation  by the Fund of future  rates of return on its shares.  At times,
the Adviser may reduce its  compensation or assume expenses of the Fund in order
to reduce the Fund's expenses.  Any such waiver or reimbursement  would increase
the Fund's return during the period of the waiver or reimbursement.


                                       26
<PAGE>


      Average  annual  return and total return  computed at the public  offering
price for the periods ended December 31, 1999 are set forth in the tables below:

         AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN:*
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                         <C>              <C>               <C>            <C>
                                            ONE YEAR         FIVE YEARS        TEN YEARS      LIFE OF FUND**
                                            --------         ----------        ---------      ------------
INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II                   -8.05%             6.44%             N/A             7.51%

         TOTAL RETURN:*

                                            ONE YEAR         FIVE YEARS        TEN YEARS      LIFE OF FUND**
                                            --------         ----------        ---------      ------------
INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II                   -8.05%            36.62%             N/A             98.02%
</TABLE>

------------------------
*   All return  figures  reflect the current  maximum  sales charge of 6.25% and
    dividends  reinvested at net asset value.  Certain expenses of the Fund have
    been waived or reimbursed from  commencement of operations  through December
    31, 1999.  Accordingly,  return figures are higher than they would have been
    had such expenses not been waived or reimbursed.

** The inception date for the Fund is July 26, 1990.



      Average  annual  total  return  and  total  return  may  also be  based on
investment at reduced  sales charge levels or at net asset value.  Any quotation
of return not  reflecting  the maximum  sales charge will be greater than if the
maximum sales charge were used.  Average annual return and total return computed
at net asset value for the periods  ended  December 31, 1999 is set forth in the
tables below:

         AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN:*
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                          <C>              <C>               <C>            <C>
                                             ONE YEAR         FIVE YEARS        TEN YEARS      LIFE OF FUND**
                                             --------         ----------        ---------      ------------
INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II                    -1.92%             7.83%             N/A             8.24%

         TOTAL RETURN:*

                                             ONE YEAR         FIVE YEARS        TEN YEARS      LIFE OF FUND**
                                             --------         ----------        ---------      --------------
INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND II                    -1.92%            45.79%             N/A            111.19%
</TABLE>

-----------------
*   Certain   expenses  of  the  Fund  have  been  waived  or  reimbursed   from
    commencement of operations  through December 31, 1999.  Accordingly,  return
    figures  are higher  than they would  have been had such  expenses  not been
    waived or reimbursed.

** The inception date for the Fund is July 26, 1990.



      Yield for the Fund is presented for a specified  thirty-day  period ("base
period").  Yield  is based  on the  amount  determined  by (i)  calculating  the
aggregate  amount of dividends  and interest  earned by the Fund during the base
period less expenses  accrued for that period (net of  reimbursement),  and (ii)
dividing that amount by the product of (A) the average daily number of shares of
the Fund  outstanding  during the base period and entitled to receive  dividends
and (B) the per share maximum public  offering price of the Fund on the last day
of the base period.  The result is  annualized by  compounding  on a semi-annual
basis to determine the Fund's yield.  For this  calculation,  interest earned on
debt  obligations  held by the Fund is generally  calculated  using the yield to
maturity (or first expected call date) of such obligations based on their market
values  (or,  in  the  case  of  receivables-backed   securities  such  as  GNMA
Certificates,  based on cost).  Dividends on equity securities are accrued daily
at their estimated stated dividend rates.


                                       27
<PAGE>


      The Fund's tax-equivalent yield during the base period may be presented in
one or more stated tax brackets. Tax-equivalent yield is calculated by adjusting
the Fund's  tax-exempt yield by a factor designed to show the approximate  yield
that a taxable investment would have to earn to produce an after-tax yield equal
to the Fund's tax-exempt yield.

      To calculate a taxable bond yield which is equivalent to a tax-exempt bond
yield (for Federal tax purposes), shareholders may use the following formula:

                     TAX FREE YIELD
                   ------------------    =    Taxable Equivalent Yield
                  1 - Your Tax Bracket


      For the 30 days ended  December  31,  1999,  the yield and  tax-equivalent
yield  (assuming  a Federal  tax rate of 28%) for the Fund was 4.46% and  6.19%,
respectively.  The maximum  Federal tax rate for this period was 39.6%.  Some of
the Fund's expenses were waived or reimbursed  during this period.  Accordingly,
yields are higher than they would have been had such expenses not been waived or
reimbursed.

      The distribution rate for the Fund is presented for a twelve-month period.
It is calculated by adding the dividends for the last twelve months and dividing
the sum by a Fund's  offering  price  per share at the end of that  period.  The
distribution  rate  is also  calculated  by  using a  Fund's  net  asset  value.
Distribution  rate  calculations do not include capital gain  distributions,  if
any, paid. The distribution rate for the twelve-month  period ended December 31,
1999 for shares of the Fund calculated  using the offering price was 4.56%.  The
distribution  rate for the same period for shares of the Fund  calculated  using
the net asset value was 4.79%.  During this period certain  expenses of the Fund
were waived or reimbursed.  Accordingly,  the distribution rates are higher than
they would have been had such expenses not been waived or reimbursed.

      The Fund may include in advertisements and sales literature,  information,
examples and  statistics to  illustrate  the effect of  compounding  income at a
fixed rate of return to  demonstrate  the growth of an investment  over a stated
period  of time  resulting  from the  payment  of  dividends  and  capital  gain
distributions in additional shares. These examples may also include hypothetical
returns comparing taxable versus  tax-deferred  growth which would pertain to an
IRA, section 403(b)(7) Custodial Account or other qualified  retirement program.
The  examples  used  will  be  for  illustrative   purposes  only  and  are  not
representations  by the Funds of past or future  yield or  return.  Examples  of
typical graphs and charts  depicting such historical  performances,  compounding
and hypothetical returns are included in Appendix C.

      From time to time,  in reports and  promotional  literature,  the Fund may
compare their  performance to, or cite the historical  performance of, Overnight
Government  repurchase  agreements,   U.S.  Treasury  bills,  notes  and  bonds,
certificates of deposit,  and six-month money market  certificates or indices of
broad groups of unmanaged  securities  considered  to be  representative  of, or
similar to, a Fund's portfolio holdings, such as:

      Lipper  Analytical  Services,   Inc.  ("Lipper")  is  a  widely-recognized
      independent  service that monitors and ranks the  performance of regulated
      investment  companies.   The  Lipper  performance  analysis  includes  the
      reinvestment of capital gain  distributions  and income dividends but does
      not take sales charges into consideration. The method of calculating total
      return data on indices  utilizes  actual  dividends on  ex-dividend  dates
      accumulated for the quarter and reinvested at quarter end.

      Morningstar Mutual Funds  ("Morningstar"),  a semi-monthly  publication of
      Morningstar,  Inc.  Morningstar  proprietary  ratings  reflect  historical
      risk-adjusted  performance  and are subject to change every  month.  Funds
      with at least three years of performance history are assigned ratings from


                                       28
<PAGE>


      one  star  (lowest)  to five  stars  (highest).  Morningstar  ratings  are
      calculated  from the Fund's  three-,  five-,  and ten-year  average annual
      returns (when  available) and a risk factor that reflects fund performance
      relative to three-month Treasury bill monthly returns.  Fund's returns are
      adjusted  for  fees  and  sales  loads.  Ten  percent  of the  funds in an
      investment  category  receive five stars,  22.5%  receive four stars,  35%
      receive three stars,  22.5% receive two stars,  and the bottom 10% receive
      one star.

      Salomon Brothers Inc., "Market  Performance," a monthly  publication which
      tracks  principal  return,  total return and yield on the Salomon Brothers
      Broad Investment-Grade Bond Index and the components of the Index.

      Telerate Systems,  Inc., a computer system to which the Adviser subscribes
      which daily tracks the rates on money market instruments, public corporate
      debt obligations and public  obligations of the U.S. Treasury and agencies
      of the U.S. Government.

      THE WALL STREET  JOURNAL,  a daily newspaper  publication  which lists the
      yields and  current  market  values on money  market  instruments,  public
      corporate debt  obligations,  public  obligations of the U.S. Treasury and
      agencies  of the  U.S.  Government  as well as  common  stocks,  preferred
      stocks, convertible preferred stocks, options and commodities; in addition
      to  indices  prepared  by  the  research  departments  of  such  financial
      organizations as Lehman Bros.,  Merrill Lynch,  Pierce,  Fenner and Smith,
      Inc., First Boston,  Salomon Brothers,  Morgan Stanley,  Goldman,  Sachs &
      Co., Donaldson,  Lufkin & Jenrette, Value Line, Datastream  International,
      James Capel, S.G. Warburg  Securities,  County Natwest and UBS UK Limited,
      including  information provided by the Federal Reserve Board, Moody's, and
      the Federal Reserve Bank.

      Merrill Lynch,  Pierce,  Fenner & Smith,  Inc.,  "Taxable Bond Indices," a
      monthly  corporate  government  index  publication  which lists principal,
      coupon and total return on over 100  different  taxable bond indices which
      Merrill Lynch tracks.  They also list the par weighted  characteristics of
      each Index.

      Lehman  Brothers,  Inc., "The Bond Market  Report," a monthly  publication
      which tracks principal,  coupon and total return on the Lehman Govt./Corp.
      Index and Lehman  Aggregate  Bond Index,  as well as all the components of
      these Indices.

      Standard  & Poor's  500  Composite  Stock  Price  Index  and the Dow Jones
      Industrial  Average  of 30 stocks  are  unmanaged  lists of common  stocks
      frequently  used as general  measures of stock market  performance.  Their
      performance  figures  reflect  changes  of  market  prices  and  quarterly
      reinvestment of all  distributions but are not adjusted for commissions or
      other costs.

      The Consumer Price Index, prepared by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics,
      is a commonly  used measure of  inflation.  The Index shows changes in the
      cost of  selected  consumer  goods and does not  represent  a return on an
      investment vehicle.

      Credit  Suisse  First  Boston  High Yield Index is designed to measure the
      performance of the high yield bond market.

      Lehman  Brothers  Aggregate  Index is an unmanaged  index which  generally
      covers  the U.S.  investment  grade  fixed  rate  bond  market,  including
      government  and  corporate   securities,   agency  mortgage   pass-through
      securities, and asset-backed securities.

      Lehman Brothers  Corporate Bond Index includes all publicly issued,  fixed
      rate, non-convertible investment grade dollar-denominated,  corporate debt
      which have at least one year to maturity and an  outstanding  par value of
      at least $100 million.


                                       29
<PAGE>


      The  NYSE  composite  of  component   indices--unmanaged  indices  of  all
      industrial,  utilities,  transportation,  and finance stocks listed on the
      NYSE.

      Morgan  Stanley  All  Country  World Free Index is designed to measure the
      performance  of  stock  markets  in the  United  States,  Europe,  Canada,
      Australia,  New Zealand and the developed and emerging  markets of Eastern
      Europe,  Latin  America,  Asia and the Far  East.  The index  consists  of
      approximately  60% of the  aggregate  market  value of the  covered  stock
      exchanges and is  calculated to exclude  companies and share classes which
      cannot be freely purchased by foreigners.

      Morgan Stanley World Index is designed to measure the performance of stock
      markets in the United States, Europe, Canada,  Australia,  New Zealand and
      the Far East.  The index  consists of  approximately  60% of the aggregate
      market value of the covered stock exchanges.

      Reuters, a wire service that frequently reports on global business.

      Russell 2000 Index,  prepared by the Frank  Russell  Company,  consists of
      U.S.  publicly traded stocks of domestic  companies that rank from 1000 to
      3000 by market capitalization.

      Russell 2500 Index,  prepared by the Frank  Russell  Company,  consists of
      U.S.  publicly  traded stocks of domestic  companies that rank from 500 to
      3000 by market capitalization.

      Salomon  Brothers  Government  Index is a  market  capitalization-weighted
      index  that  consists  of  debt  issued  by the  U.S.  Treasury  and  U.S.
      Government sponsored agencies.

      Salomon Brothers Mortgage Index is a market  capitalization-weighted index
      that consists of all agency pass-throughs and FHA and GNMA project notes.

      Standard    &    Poor's    400    Mid-Cap    Index    is   an    unmanaged
      capitalization-weighted index that is generally representative of the U.S.
      market for medium cap stocks.

      Standard & Poor's Small-Cap 600 Index is a  capitalization-weighted  index
      that measures the  performance of selected U.S. stocks with a small market
      capitalization.

      Standard & Poor's Utilities Index is an unmanaged  capitalization weighted
      index comprising  common stock in  approximately 41 electric,  natural gas
      distributors and pipelines, and telephone companies. The Index assumes the
      reinvestment of dividends.

      From time to time,  in reports  and  promotional  literature,  performance
rankings and ratings reported  periodically in national  financial  publications
such as MONEY, FORBES, BUSINESS WEEK, BARRON'S,  FINANCIAL TIMES and FORTUNE may
also be used. In addition,  quotations from articles and performance ratings and
ratings  appearing  in daily  newspaper  publications  such as THE  WALL  STREET
JOURNAL, THE NEW YORK TIMES and NEW YORK DAILY NEWS may be cited.

                               GENERAL INFORMATION

      ORGANIZATION.  The Trust is a  Massachusetts  business trust  organized on
October 28, 1986. The Trust is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares
of beneficial  interest,  no par value, in such separate and distinct series and
classes of shares as the Board shall from time to time establish.  The shares of
beneficial  interest of the Trust are presently divided into one series,  having
two  classes,  designated  Class A and Class B shares.  The Trust  does not hold
annual  shareholder  meetings.  If requested to do so by the holders of at least
10% of the Trust's  outstanding  shares,  the Trust's  Board will call a special
meeting of shareholders for any purpose, including the removal of Trustees. Each


                                       30
<PAGE>


share of the Fund has equal voting rights. Each share of the Fund is entitled to
participate equally in dividends and other distributions and the proceeds of any
liquidation.

      CUSTODIAN.  The Bank of New York, 48 Wall Street,  New York, NY 10286,  is
custodian of the securities and cash of the Fund.

      AUDITS AND REPORTS.  The accounts of the Fund are audited  twice a year by
Tait, Weller & Baker,  independent  certified public accountants,  8 Penn Center
Plaza, Philadelphia, PA, 19103. Shareholders of the Fund receive semi-annual and
annual reports, including audited financial statements, and a list of securities
owned.

      LEGAL  COUNSEL.  Kirkpatrick & Lockhart LLP,  1800  Massachusetts  Avenue,
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 serves as counsel to the Fund.

      TRANSFER AGENT.  Administrative  Data Management  Corp.,  581 Main Street,
Woodbridge, NJ 07095-1198, an affiliate of FIMCO and FIC, acts as transfer agent
for the Fund and as redemption agent for regular  redemptions.  The fees charged
to the Fund by the Transfer  Agent are $5.00 to open an account;  $3.00 for each
certificate  issued;  $.75 per account per month; $10.00 for each legal transfer
of shares;  $.45 per account per dividend  declared;  $5.00 for each exchange of
shares into a Fund; $5.00 for each partial  withdrawal or complete  liquidation;
$4.00  for  each   shareholder   services   call;   $20.00   for  each  item  of
correspondence;  and $1.00 per account per report  required by any  governmental
authority.  Additional  fees  charged  to the  Funds by the  Transfer  Agent are
assumed by the Underwriter.  The Transfer Agent reserves the right to change the
fees on prior notice to the Fund. Upon request from  shareholders,  the Transfer
Agent will provide an account history.  For account histories  covering the most
recent three year period, there is no charge. The Transfer Agent charges a $5.00
administrative  fee for each  account  history  covering the period 1983 through
1994 and $10.00  per year for each  account  history  covering  the period  1974
through  1982.  Account  histories  prior to 1974 will not be  provided.  If any
communication from the Transfer Agent to a shareholder is returned from the U.S.
Postal Service marked as  "Undeliverable"  two consecutive  times,  the Transfer
Agent will cease  sending any further  materials  to the  shareholder  until the
Transfer  Agent  is  provided  with a  correct  address.  Efforts  to  locate  a
shareholder will be conducted in accordance with SEC rules and regulations prior
to escheatment of funds to the appropriate  state  treasury.  The Transfer Agent
may  deduct  the  costs  of  its  efforts  to  locate  a  shareholder  from  the
shareholder's  account. These costs may include a percentage of the account if a
search  company  charges such a fee in exchange for its location  services.  The
Transfer  Agent  is not  responsible  for any  fees  that  states  and/or  their
representatives may charge for processing the return of funds to investors whose
funds  have  been  escheated.   The  Transfer   Agent's   telephone   number  is
1-800-423-4026.

      5% SHAREHOLDERS. As of December 14, 2000, the following owned of record or
beneficially 5% or more of the outstanding shares of the Fund:

      [UPDATE]

% OF SHARES             SHAREHOLDER
-----------             FIRST CLEARING CORPORATION
   10.9%                10700 WHEAT FIRST DRIVE
                        GLEN ALLEN, VA 23060



      SHAREHOLDER  LIABILITY.  The Trust is  organized  as an entity  known as a
"Massachusetts  business trust." Under Massachusetts law, shareholders of such a
trust  may,  under  certain  circumstances,  be held  personally  liable for the
obligations of the Trust. The Declaration of Trust however,  contains an express
disclaimer of  shareholder  liability for acts or  obligations  of the Trust and


                                       31
<PAGE>


requires that notice of such disclaimer be given in each agreement,  obligation,
or  instrument  entered  into or  executed  by the  Trust or the  Trustees.  The
Declaration  of Trust  provides for  indemnification  out of the property of the
Trust of any  shareholder  held  personally  liable for the  obligations  of the
Trust.  The  Declaration  of Trust  also  provides  that the Trust  shall,  upon
request,  assume the defense of any claim made against any  shareholder  for any
act or obligation of the Trust and satisfy any judgment thereon.  Thus, the risk
of a shareholder's  incurring financial loss on account of shareholder liability
is limited to  circumstances  in which the Trust  itself would be unable to meet
its  obligations.  The Adviser  believes that, in view of the above, the risk of
personal  liability to  shareholders  is immaterial  and extremely  remote.  The
Declaration  of Trust further  provides that the Trustees will not be liable for
errors of judgment or mistakes of fact or law, but nothing in the Declaration of
Trust  protects a Trustee  against any liability to which he would  otherwise be
subject  by reason of  willful  misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross  negligence,  or
reckless  disregard  of the duties  involved in the  conduct of his office.  The
Trust may have an obligation to indemnify  Trustees and officers with respect to
litigation.

      TRADING BY  PORTFOLIO  MANAGERS  AND OTHER  ACCESS  PERSONS.  Pursuant  to
Section 17(j) of the 1940 Act and Rule 17j-1 thereunder, the Trust, the Adviser,
and the Underwriter have adopted Codes of Ethics  ("Codes").  These Codes permit
portfolio managers and other access persons of the Fund to invest in securities,
including  securities  that  may  be  owned  by the  Fund,  subject  to  certain
restrictions.


                                       32
<PAGE>


                                   APPENDIX A
                     DESCRIPTION OF COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS

STANDARD & POOR'S RATINGS GROUP
-------------------------------

      Standard & Poor's  Ratings  Group  ("S&P")  commercial  paper  rating is a
current  assessment  of the  likelihood  of timely  payment  of debt  considered
short-term in the relevant market.  Ratings are graded into several  categories,
ranging from "A-1" for the highest quality obligations to "D" for the lowest.

      A-1 This highest  category  indicates that the degree of safety  regarding
timely payment is strong.  Those issues  determined to possess  extremely strong
safety characteristics are denoted with a plus (+) designation.

MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC.
-------------------------------

      Moody's Investors Service,  Inc.  ("Moody's")  short-term debt ratings are
opinions of the ability of issuers to repay  punctually  senior debt obligations
which have an original maturity not exceeding one year. Obligations relying upon
support mechanisms such as letters-of-credit and bonds of indemnity are excluded
unless explicitly rated.

      PRIME-1  Issuers (or supporting  institutions)  rated Prime-1 (P-1) have a
superior  ability for  repayment  of senior  short-term  debt  obligations.  P-1
repayment   ability  will  often  be   evidenced   by  many  of  the   following
characteristics:

      - Leading market positions in well-established industries.
      - High rates of return on funds employed.
      - Conservative capitalization structure with moderate reliance on debt and
        ample asset  protection.
      - Broad  margins in  earnings coverage of fixed financial charges and high
        internal cash generation.
      - Well-established  access to a range of  financial  markets  and  assured
        sources of alternate liquidity.


                                       33
<PAGE>


                                   APPENDIX B
                      DESCRIPTION OF MUNICIPAL NOTE RATINGS

STANDARD & POOR'S RATINGS GROUP
-------------------------------

      S&P's note rating reflects the liquidity  concerns and market access risks
unique to notes. Notes due in 3 years or less will likely receive a note rating.
Notes maturing  beyond 3 years will most likely receive a long-term debt rating.
The following criteria will be used in making that assessment.

      - Amortization  schedule (the larger the final maturity  relative to other
maturities the more likely it will be treated as a note).

      - Source of Payment (the more dependent the issue is on the market for its
refinancing, the more likely it will be treated as a note).

      Note rating symbols are as follows:

      SP-1 Very strong or strong  capacity to pay principal and interest.  Those
issues determined to possess overwhelming safety characteristics will be given a
plus (+) designation.

MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC.
-------------------------------

      Moody's ratings for state and municipal notes and other  short-term  loans
are  designated   Moody's   Investment  Grade  (MIG).  This  distinction  is  in
recognition of the difference between short-term credit risk and long-term risk.

      MIG-1.  Loans bearing this  designation are of the best quality,  enjoying
strong  protection from  established  cash flows of funds for their servicing or
from established and broad-based access to the market for refinancing, or both.


                                       34
<PAGE>


                                   APPENDIX C

    [The following tables are represented as graphs in the printed document.]

The following graphs and chart illustrate hypothetical returns:

                                INCREASE RETURNS

This graph shows over a period of time even a small increase in returns can make
a significant difference.  This assumes a hypothetical investment of $10,000.

       Years        10%             8%             6%             4%
       -----      -------         ------         ------         ------
          5        16,453         14,898         13,489         12,210
         10        27,070         22,196         18,194         14,908
         15        44,539         33,069         24,541         18,203
         20        73,281         49,268         33,102         22,226
         25       120,569         73,402         44,650         27,138


                               INCREASE INVESTMENT

This graph shows the more you invest on a regular basis over time,  the more you
can accumulate. this assumes  monthly installment with  a constant  hypothetical
return rate of 8%.

       Years        $100          $250           $500          $1,000
       -----       ------        -------        -------        -------
          5         7,348         18,369         36,738         73,476
         10        18,295         43,736         91,473        182,946
         15        34,604         86,509        173,019        346,038
         20        58,902        147,255        294,510        589,020
         25        95,103        237,757        475,513        951,026


                                       C-1
<PAGE>




    [The following table is represented as a graph in the printed document.]

This  chart  illustrates  the  time  value  of money  based  upon the  following
assumptions:

If you  invested  $2,000 each year for 20 years,  starting at 25,  assuming a 9%
investment return,  you would accumulate  $573,443 by the time you reach age 65.
However,  had you invested the same $2,000 each year for 20 years, at that rate,
but waited until age 35, you would  accumulate  only  $242,228 - a difference of
$331,215.

               25 years old ..............   573,443
               35 years old ..............   242,228
               45 years old ..............   103,320

     For each of the above  graphs and chart it should be noted that  systematic
investment  plans do not assume a profit or protect  against  loss in  declining
markets. Investors should consider their financial ability to continue purchases
through periods of both high and low price levels.  Figures are hypothetical and
for  illustrative  purposes only and do not  represent any actual  investment or
performance. The value of a shareholder's investment and return may vary.


                                      C-2
<PAGE>



    [The following table is represented as a chart in the printed document.]

The following chart shows that inflation is constantly eroding the value of your
money.

                       THE EFFECTS OF INFLATION OVER TIME

                   1966 .......................  96.61836
                   1967 .......................  93.80423
                   1968 .......................  89.59334
                   1969 .......................  84.36285
                   1970 .......................  79.88906
                   1971 .......................  77.33694
                   1972 .......................  74.79395
                   1973 .......................  68.80768
                   1974 .......................  61.27131
                   1975 .......................  57.31647
                   1976 .......................  54.63915
                   1977 .......................  51.20820
                   1978 .......................  46.98000
                   1979 .......................  41.46514
                   1980 .......................  36.85790
                   1981 .......................  33.84564
                   1982 .......................  32.60659
                   1983 .......................  31.41290
                   1984 .......................  30.23378
                   1985 .......................  29.12696
                   1986 .......................  28.81005
                   1987 .......................  27.59583
                   1988 .......................  26.43279
                   1989 .......................  25.27035
                   1990 .......................  23.81748
                   1991 .......................  23.10134
                   1992 .......................  22.45028
                   1993 .......................  21.86006
                   1994 .......................  21.28536
                   1995 .......................  20.76620
                   1996 .......................  20.16135


                   1996 .......................  100.00
                   1997 .......................  103.00
                   1998 .......................  106.00
                   1999 .......................  109.00
                   2000 .......................  113.00
                   2001 .......................  116.00
                   2002 .......................  119.00
                   2003 .......................  123.00
                   2004 .......................  127.00
                   2005 .......................  130.00
                   2006 .......................  134.00
                   2007 .......................  138.00
                   2008 .......................  143.00
                   2009 .......................  147.00
                   2010 .......................  151.00
                   2011 .......................  156.00


                                       C-3
<PAGE>

                   2012 .......................  160.00
                   2013 .......................  165.00
                   2014 .......................  170.00
                   2015 .......................  175.00
                   2016 .......................  181.00
                   2017 .......................  186.00
                   2018 .......................  192.00
                   2019 .......................  197.00
                   2020 .......................  203.00
                   2021 .......................  209.00
                   2022 .......................  216.00
                   2023 .......................  222.00
                   2024 .......................  229.00
                   2025 .......................  236.00
                   2026 .......................  243.00

Inflation erodes your buying power.  $100 in 1966, could purchase five times the
goods and service as in 1996 ($100 vs. $20).* Projecting  inflation at 3%, goods
and services costing $100 today will cost $243 in the year 2026.

* Source: Consumer Price Index, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.


                                       C-3
<PAGE>


The accompanying  table  illustrates  that if you are in the 36% tax bracket,  a
tax-free  yield of 3% is actually  equivalent  to a taxable  investment  earning
4.69%.

                          Your Taxable Equivalent Yield

                                        Your Federal Tax Bracket
                           ---------------------------------------------

                           28.0%        31.0%       36.0%       39.6%
  your tax-free yield
          3.00%             4.17%        4.35%       4.69%       4.97%
          3.50%             4.86%        5.07%       5.47%       5.79%
          4.00%             5.56%        5.80%       6.25%       6.62%
          4.50%             6.25%        6.52%       7.03%       7.45%
          5.00%             6.94%        7.25%       7.81%       8.25%
          5.50%             7.64%        7.97%       8.59%       9.11%


This information is general in nature and should not be construed as tax advice.
Please  consult a tax or financial  adviser as to how this  information  affects
your particular circumstances.





                                       C-4


<PAGE>


                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                               AS OF JUNE 30, 2000

      The financial  statements which follow contain  financial  information for
the Insured Tax Exempt Fund II for the annual period ended December 31, 1999 and
the semi-annual period ended June 30, 2000.

      Registrant  incorporates by reference the financial  statements and report
of independent  auditors  contained in the Annual Report to shareholders for the
annual period ended December 31, 1999 and the Semi-Annual Report to shareholders
for the  semi-annual  period ended June 30, 2000  electronically  filed with the
Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  on March 2,  2000 and  August  31,  2000,
respectively.

      (Accession Number for the Annual Report:0000912057-00-009400 and Accession
Number for the Semi-Annual Report:0000928816-00-000367)


                                       47
<PAGE>



                               SHAREHOLDER MANUAL:
               A GUIDE TO YOUR FIRST INVESTORS MUTUAL FUND ACCOUNT


                            EXECUTIVE INVESTORS TRUST
                                 BLUE CHIP FUND
                                 HIGH YIELD FUND
                             INSURED TAX EXEMPT FUND
                        SUPPLEMENT DATED JANUARY 28, 2000
                TO STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION DATED APRIL 30, 1999

The following Shareholder Manual dated January 11, 2000 replaces the Shareholder
Manual dated April 22, 1999:

<PAGE>
A Guide to Your
First Investors
Mutual Fund Account

as of January 11, 2000




INTRODUCTION
Investing in mutual funds doesn't have to be complicated. Your registered
representative is available to answer your questions and help you process your
transactions. First Investors offers personalized service and a wide variety of
mutual funds. In the event you wish to process a transaction directly, the
material provided in this easy-to-follow guide tells you how to contact us and
explains our policies and procedures. Please note that there are special rules
for money market funds.

Please read this manual completely to gain a better understanding of how shares
are bought, sold, exchanged, and transferred. In addition, the manual provides
you with a description of the services we offer to simplify investing. The
services, privileges and fees referenced in this manual are subject to change.
You should call our Shareholder Services Department at 1 (800) 423-4026 before
initiating any transaction.

This manual must be preceded or accompanied by a First Investors mutual fund
prospectus. For more complete information on any First Investors Fund, including
charges and expenses, refer to the prospectus. Read the prospectus carefully
before you invest or send money.



                              Principal Underwriter
                           First Investors Corporation
                                 95 Wall Street
                               New York, NY 10005
                                 1-212-858-8000
                                 Transfer Agent
                      Administrative Data Management Corp.
                                 581 Main Street
                              Woodbridge, NJ 07095
                                 1-800-423-4026
TABLE OF CONTENTS
HOW TO BUY SHARES
To Open  an  Account................1
To Open a Retirement Account........2
Minimum Initial Investment..........2
Additional Investments..............2
Acceptable Forms of Payment.........2
Share Classes.......................2
Share Class Specification...........3
Class A Shares......................3
Class B Shares......................5
How to Pay..........................6
HOW TO SELL SHARES
Written Redemptions.................9


<PAGE>


Telephone Redemptions...............9
Electronic Funds Transfer...........9
Systematic Withdrawal Plans.........10
Expedited Wire Redemptions..........10

HOW TO EXCHANGE SHARES
Exchange Methods....................11
Exchange Conditions.................12
Exchanging Funds with
Automatic Investments or
Systematic Withdrawals..............12

WHEN AND HOW
FUND SHARES ARE PRICED..............13

HOW PURCHASE,
REDEMPTION AND
EXCHANGE ORDERS ARE
PROCESSED AND PRICED.................13
SPECIAL RULES FOR MONEY
MARKET FUNDS ........................14

RIGHT TO REJECT PURCHASE
OR EXCHANGE ORDERS...................15

SIGNATURE GUARANTEE
POLICY  .............................15

TELEPHONE SERVICES
Telephone Exchanges
and Redemptions......................16
Shareholder Services.................17

OTHER SERVICES.......................18

ACCOUNT STATEMENTS
Transaction Confirmation Statements..20
Master Account Statements 20
Annual and Semi-Annual Reports.......20

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS
Dividends and Distributions..........21
Buying a Dividend....................21

TAX FORMS  ..........................22
THE OUTLOOK..........................22

<PAGE>

HOW TO BUY SHARES
First Investors offers a wide variety of mutual funds to meet your financial
needs ("FI Funds"). Your registered representative will review your financial
objectives and risk tolerance, explain our product line and services, and help
you select the right investments. Call our Shareholder Services Department at 1
(800) 423-4026 or visit us on-line at www.firstinvestors.com for more
information.

TO  OPEN  AN  ACCOUNT
Before investing, you must establish an account with your broker-dealer. At
First Investors Corporation ("FI") you do this by completing and signing a
Master Account Agreement ("MAA"). Some types of accounts require additional
paperwork.* After you determine the fund(s) you want to purchase, deliver your
completed MAA and your check, made payable to First Investors Corporation, to
your registered representative. New client accounts must be established through
your registered representative.





NON-RETIREMENT
ACCOUNTS

We offer a variety of different "non-retirement" accounts, which is the term we
use to describe all accounts other than retirement accounts.

INDIVIDUAL ACCOUNTS.  These accounts may be opened by any adult individual.
Telephone privileges are automatically available, unless they are declined.

JOINT ACCOUNTS.  For any account with two or more owners, all owners must
sign requests to process transactions.  Telephone privileges allow any one of
the owners to process transactions independently.

GIFTS AND TRANSFERS TO MINORS. Custodial accounts for a minor may be established
under your state's Uniform Gifts/Transfers to Minors Act. Custodial accounts are
registered under the minor's social security number.

TRUSTS.  A trust account may be opened only if you have a valid written trust
document.

TRANSFER ON DEATH (TOD). TOD registrations, available on all FI Funds in all
states, allow individual and joint account owners to name one or more
beneficiaries. The ownership of the account passes to the named beneficiaries in
the event of the death of all account owners.

* ADDITIONAL PAPERWORK REQUIRED FOR CERTAIN ACCOUNTS.




TYPE OF ACCOUNT      ADDITIONAL DOCUMENTS REQUIRED

Corporations   First Investors Certificate of Authority
Partnership
& Trusts

Transfer On Death    First Investors TOD Registration Request Form
(TOD)

Estates        Original or Certified Copy of Death Certificate
               Certified Copy of Letters Testamentary/Administration
               First Investors Executor's Certification & Indemnification Form

Conservatorships     Certified copy of court document appointing Conservator/
& Guardianships      Guardian


<PAGE>


RETIREMENT  ACCOUNTS
We offer the following types of retirement plans for individuals and employers:

INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS including Roth, Traditional, and Rollover IRAs.

SIMPLE IRAS for employers.

SEP-IRAS (SIMPLIFIED EMPLOYEE PENSION PLANS) for small business owners or people
with income from self-employment. SARSEP-IRAs are available as trustee to
trustee transfers.

403(B)(7) accounts for employees of eligible tax-exempt organizations such as
schools, hospitals and charitable organizations.

 401(K) plans for employers.

MONEY PURCHASE PENSION
& PROFIT SHARING plans for sole proprietors and partnerships.

Currently, there are no annual service fees chargeable to a participant in
connection with an IRA, SEP-IRA, SARSEP-IRA or SIMPLE-IRA. Each Fund currently
pays the annual $10.00 custodian fee for each IRA account maintained with such
Fund. This policy may be changed at any time by a Fund on 45 days' written
notice to the holder of any IRA, SEP-IRA, SARSEP-IRA or SIMPLE-IRA. First
Financial Savings has reserved the right to waive its fees at any time or to
change the fees on 45 days' prior written notice to the holder of any IRA.
(First Financial Savings Bank will change its name to First Investors Federal
Savings Bank.)

For more information about these plans call your registered representative or
our Shareholder Services Department at
1 (800) 423-4026.

MINIMUM INITIAL
INVESTMENT
Your initial investment in a non-retirement fund account may be as little as
$1,000. The minimum is waived if you use one of our Automatic Investment
Programs (see How to Pay) or if you open a Fund account through a full exchange
from another FI Fund. You can open a First Investors Traditional IRA or Roth IRA
with as little as $500. Other retirement accounts may have lower initial
investment requirements at the Fund's discretion.


ADDITIONAL INVESTMENTS
Once you have established an account, you can add to it through your
registered representative or by sending us a check directly.  There is no
minimum requirement on additional purchases into existing fund accounts.
Remember to include your FI Fund account number on your check made payable to
First Investors Corporation.
Mail checks to:
FIRST INVESTORS CORPORATION
ATTN: DEPT. CP
581 MAIN STREET
WOODBRIDGE, NJ 07095-1198

ACCEPTABLE FORMS OF PAYMENT The following forms of payment are acceptable:

-checks made payable to First Investors Corporation.

-Money Line and Automatic Payroll Investment electronic funds transfers.

-Federal Funds wire transfers.


<PAGE>


For your protection, never give your registered representative cash or a check
made payable to your registered representative.

We DO NOT accept:

-Third party checks.
-Traveler's checks.
-Checks drawn on non-US banks.
-Money orders.
-Cash.

SHARE  CLASSES
All FI Funds are available in Class A and Class B shares. Direct purchases into
Class B share money market accounts are not accepted. Class B money market fund
shares may only be acquired through an exchange from another Class B share
account or through Class B share dividend cross-reinvestment.



Each class of shares has its own cost structure. As a result, different classes
of shares in the same fund generally have different prices. Class A shares have
a front-end sales charge. Class B shares may have a contingent deferred sales
charge ("CDSC"). While both classes have a Rule 12b-1 fee, the fee on Class B
shares is generally higher. The principal advantages of Class A shares are that
they have lower overall expenses, the availability of quantity discounts on
sales charges, and certain account privileges that are not offered on Class B
shares. The principal advantage of Class B shares is that all your money is put
to work from the outset. Your registered representative can help you decide
which class of shares is best for you.

SHARE CLASS             SPECIFICATION
It's very important to specify which class of shares you wish to purchase when
you open a new account. All First Investors account applications have a place to
designate your selection. If you do not specify which class of shares you want
to purchase, Class A shares will automatically be purchased.

CLASS  A SHARES
When you buy Class A shares, you pay the offering price - the net asset value of
the fund plus a front-end sales charge. The front-end sales charge declines with
larger investments.

    CLASS  A  SALES  CHARGES

                            AS A % OF          AS A % OF YOUR
    YOUR INVESTMENT       OFFERING PRICE        INVESTMENT
    up to  $24,999             6.25%              6.67%
    $25,000 - $49,999          5.75%              6.10%
    $50,000 - $99,999          5.50%              5.82%
    $100,000 - $249,999        4.50%              4.71%
    $250,000 - $499,999        3.50%              3.63%
    $500,000 - $999,999        2.50%              2.56%
    $1,000,000 or more            0%*                0%*

* If you  invest  $1,000,000  or more in  Class A  shares,  you  will  not pay a
front-end  sales charge.  However,  if you make such an investment and then sell
your shares  within 24 months of purchase,  you will pay a  contingent  deferred
sales charge ("CDSC") of 1.00%.

Generally, you should consider purchasing Class A shares if you plan to
invest $250,000 or more either initially or over time.
SALES CHARGE WAIVERS
& REDUCTIONS ON CLASS A SHARES:


<PAGE>


If you qualify for one of the sales charge reductions or waivers, it is very
important to let us know at the time you place your order. Include a written
statement with your check explaining which privilege applies. If you do not
include this statement we cannot guarantee that you will receive the reduction
or waiver.

CLASS A SHARES MAY BE PURCHASED WITHOUT A SALES CHARGE: 1: By an officer,
trustee, director, or employee of the Fund, the Fund's adviser or subadviser,
First Investors Corporation, or any affiliates of First Investors Corporation,
or by his/her spouse, child (under age 21) or grandchild (under age 21).

2: By a former officer, trustee, director, or employee of the Fund, First
Investors Corporation, or their affiliates or by his/her spouse, child (under
age 21) or child under UTMA/UGMA provided the person worked for the company for
at least 5 years and retired or terminated employment in good standing.



3: By a FI registered representative or an authorized dealer, or by his/her
spouse, child (under age 21) or grandchild (under age 21).

4: When Class A share fund distributions are reinvested in Class A shares.

5: When Class A share Systematic Withdrawal Plan payments are reinvested in
Class A shares (except for certain payments from money market accounts which may
be subject to a sales charge).

6: When qualified retirement plan loan repayments are reinvested in Class A
shares.

7: With the liquidation proceeds from a First Investors Life Variable Annuity
Fund A, C, or D contracts or First Investors Single Premium Retirement Annuity
contract within one year of the contract's maturity date.

8: When dividends (at least $50 a year) from a First Investors Life Insurance
Company policy are invested into an EXISTING account.

9: When a group qualified plan (401(k) plans, money purchase pension plans,
profit sharing plans and 403(b) plans that are subject to Title I of ERISA) is
reinvesting redemption proceeds from another fund on which a sales charge or
CDSC was paid.

10: With distribution proceeds from a First Investors group qualified plan
account into an IRA.

11: By participant directed group qualified plans with 100 or more eligible
employees or $1,000,000 or more in assets.

12: In amounts of $1 million or more.

13: By individuals under a Letter of Intent or Cumulative Purchase Privilege of
$1 million or more.

FOR ITEMS 9 THROUGH 13 ABOVE: A CDSC OF 1.00% WILL BE DEDUCTED IF SHARES ARE
REDEEMED WITHIN 2 YEARS OF PURCHASE.

SALES CHARGES ON CLASS A SHARES MAY BE REDUCED FOR:
1: Participant directed group qualified retirement plans with 99 or fewer
eligible employees. The initial sales charge is reduced to 3.00% of the offering
price.

2: Certain unit trust holders ("unitholders") who elect to invest the entire
amount of principal, interest, and/or capital gains distributions from their
unit investment trusts in Class A shares. Unitholders of various series of New
York Insured Municipals-Income Trust sponsored by Van Kampen Merrit, Inc.,
unitholders of various series of the Multistate Tax Exempt Trust sponsored by
Advest Inc., and unitholders of various series of the Insured Municipal Insured
National Trust, J.C. Bradford & Co. as agent, may buy Class A shares of a FI
Fund with unit trust distributions at the net asset value plus a sales charge of
1.5%. Unitholders of various tax-exempt trusts, other than the New York Trust,
sponsored by Van Kampen Merritt Inc. may buy Class A shares of a FI Fund at the
net asset value plus a sales charge of 1.0%.


<PAGE>


Unitholders may make additional purchases, other than those made by unit trust
distributions, at the Fund's regular offering price.

+ CUMULATIVE PURCHASE PRIVILEGE
The Cumulative Purchase Privilege lets you add the value of all your existing FI
Fund accounts (Class A and Class B shares) to the amount of your next Class A
share investment to reach sales charge discount breakpoints. The Cumulative
Purchase Privilege lets you add the values of all of your existing FI Fund
accounts (except for amounts that have been invested directly in Cash Management
or Tax Exempt Money Market accounts on which no sales charge was previously
imposed) to the amount of your next Class A share investment in determining
whether you are entitled to a sales charge discount. While sales charge
discounts are available only on Class A shares, we will also include any Class B
shares you may own in determining whether you have achieved a discount level.
For example, if the combined current value of your existing FI Fund accounts is
$25,000 (measured by offering price), your next purchase will be eligible for a
sales charge discount at the $25,000 level. Cumulative Purchase discounts are
applied to purchases as indicated in the first column of the Class A Sales
Charge table.

All your accounts registered with the same social security number will be linked
together under the Cumulative Purchase Privilege. Your spouse's accounts and
custodial accounts held for minor children residing at your home





can also be linked to your accounts upon request.

-Conservator accounts are linked to the social security number of the ward,
 not the conservator.

-Sole proprietorship accounts are linked to personal/family accounts only if the
 account is registered with a social security number, not an employer
 identification number ("EIN").

-Testamentary trusts and living trusts may be linked to other accounts
 registered under the same trust EIN, but not to the personal accounts of the
 trustee(s).

 -Estate accounts may only be linked to other accounts registered under the same
 EIN of the estate or social security number of the decedent.

 -Church and religious organizations may link accounts to others registered with
 the same EIN but not to the personal accounts of any member.

+ LETTER OF INTENT
A Letter of Intent ("LOI") lets you purchase Class A shares at a discounted
sales charge level even though you do not yet have sufficient investments to
qualify for that discount level. An LOI is a commitment by you to invest a
specified dollar amount during a 13 month period. The amount you agree to invest
determines the sales charge you pay. Under an LOI, you can reduce the initial
sales charge on Class A share purchases based on the total amount you agree to
invest in both Class A and Class B shares during the 13 month period. Purchases
made 90 days before the date of the LOI may be included, in which case the 13
month period begins on the date of the first purchase. Your LOI can be amended
in two ways. First, you may file an amended LOI to raise or lower the LOI amount
during the 13 month period. Second, your LOI will be automatically amended if
you invest more than your LOI amount during the 13 month period and qualify for
an additional sales charge reduction. Amounts invested in the Cash Management or
Tax Exempt Money Market Funds are not counted toward an LOI.

By purchasing under an LOI, you acknowledge and agree to the following:

-You authorize First Investors to reserve 5% of your total intended investment
 in shares held in escrow in your name until the LOI is completed.

-First Investors is authorized to sell any or all of the escrow shares to
 satisfy any additional sales charges owed in the event you do not fulfill the
 LOI.

-Although you may exchange all your shares, you may not sell the reserve shares
 held in escrow until you fulfill the LOI or pay the higher sales charge.
<PAGE>

CLASS B SHARES
Class B shares are sold without an initial sales charge, putting all your money
to work for you immediately. If you redeem Class B shares within 6 years of
purchase, a CDSC will be imposed. The CDSC declines from 4% to 0% over a 6-year
period, as shown in the chart below. Class B share money market fund shares are
not sold directly. They can only be acquired through an exchange from another
Class B fund account or through cross reinvestment of dividends from another
Class B share account. Class B shares, and the dividend and distribution shares
they earn, automatically convert to Class A shares after 8 years, reducing
future annual expenses.

Generally, you should consider purchasing Class B shares if you intend to invest
less than $250,000 and you would rather pay higher ongoing expenses than an
initial sales charge.



                              CLASS B SALES CHARGES

            THE CDSC DECLINES OVER TIME AS SHOWN IN THE TABLE BELOW:





      YEAR 1    2    3    4    5    6     7+

      CDSC 4%   4%   3%   3%   2%   1%    0%



If shares redeemed are subject to a CDSC, the CDSC will be based on the lesser
of the original purchase price or redemption price. There is no CDSC on shares
acquired through dividend and capital gains reinvestment. We call these "free
shares."

Anytime you sell shares, your shares will be redeemed in the following manner to
ensure that you pay the lowest possible CDSC:

First-Class B shares representing dividends and capital gains that are not
subject to a CDSC.

Second-Class B shares held more than six years which are not subject to a CDSC.

Third-Class B shares held longest which will result in the lowest CDSC.

For purposes of calculating the CDSC, all purchases made during the calendar
month are deemed to have been made on the first business day of the month at the
average cost of the shares purchased during that period.

SALES CHARGE WAIVERS ON
CLASS B SHARES:
The CDSC on Class B shares does not apply to:

1: Appreciation on redeemed shares above their original purchase price and
shares acquired through dividend or capital gains distributions.

2: Redemptions due to the death or disability (as defined in Section 72(m)(7) of
the Internal Revenue Code) of an account owner. Redemptions following the death
or disability of one joint owner of a joint account are not deemed to be as the
result of death or disability.

3: Distributions from employee benefit plans due to plan termination.

4: Redemptions to remove an excess contribution from an IRA or qualified
retirement plan.

5: Distributions upon reaching required minimum age 70 1/2 provided you have
held the shares for at least three years.

6: Annual redemptions of up to 8% of your account's value redeemed by a
Systematic Withdrawal Plan. Free shares not subject to a CDSC will be redeemed
first and will count towards the 8% limit.


<PAGE>


7: Shares redeemed from advisory accounts managed by or held by the Fund's
investment advisor or any of its affiliates.

8: Tax-free returns of excess contributions from employee benefit plans.

9: Redemptions of non-retirement shares purchased with proceeds from the sale of
shares of another fund group between April 29, 1996 and June 30, 1996 that did
not pay a sales charge (other than money market fund accounts or retirement plan
accounts).

10: Redemptions by the Fund when the account falls below the minimum.

11: Redemptions to pay account fees.

Include a written statement with your redemption request explaining which
exemption applies. If you do not include this statement we cannot guarantee that
you will receive the waiver.

HOW  TO  PAY
You can invest using one or more of the following options:

+ CHECK:
You can buy shares by writing a check payable to First Investors Corporation. If
you are opening a new fund account, your check must meet the fund minimum. When
making purchases to an existing account, remember to include your fund account
number on your check.

AUTOMATIC INVESTMENTS:
We offer several automatic investment
programs to simplify investing.

+ MONEY LINE:
With our Money Line program, you can invest in a FI fund account with as little
as $50 a month or $600 each year by transferring funds electronically from your
bank account. You can invest up to $50,000 a month through Money Line.



Money Line allows you to select the payment amount and frequency that is best
for you. You can make automatic investments bi-weekly, semi-monthly, monthly,
quarterly, semi-annually, or annually.

The date you select as your Money Line investment date is the date on which
shares will be purchased. THE PROCEEDS MUST BE AVAILABLE IN YOUR BANK ACCOUNT
TWO BUSINESS DAYS PRIOR TO THE INVESTMENT DATE.

HOW TO APPLY:
1: Complete the Electronic Funds Transfer ("EFT") section of the application to
provide complete bank information and authorize EFT fund share purchases. Attach
a voided check or account statement. A signature guarantee of all shareholders
and bank account owners is required. PLEASE ALLOW AT LEAST 10 BUSINESS DAYS FOR
INITIAL PROCESSING.

2: Complete the Money Line section of the application to specify the amount,
frequency and date of the investment.

3: Submit the paperwork to your registered representative or send it to:
ADMINISTRATIVE DATA MANAGEMENT CORP.
581 MAIN STREET
WOODBRIDGE, NJ 07095-1198.
HOW TO CHANGE:
Provided you have telephone privileges, you may call Shareholder Services at 1
(800) 423-4026 to:

-Increase the payment up to $999.99 provided bank and fund account
registrations are the same.

-Decrease the payment.

-Discontinue the service.


<PAGE>


To change investment amounts, reallocate or cancel Money Line, you must notify
us at least 3 business days prior to the investment date.

You must send a signature guaranteed written request to Administrative Data
Management Corp. to:

-Increase the payment to $1,000 or more.



-Change bank information (a new Money Line Application and voided check or
account statement is required).

A medallion signature guarantee (see Signature Guarantee Policy) is required to
increase a Money Line payment to $25,000 or more. Changing banks or bank account
numbers requires 10 days notice. Money Line service will be suspended upon
notification that all account owners are deceased.

+ AUTOMATIC  PAYROLL
  INVESTMENT:
With our Automatic Payroll Investment service ("API") you can systematically
purchase shares by salary reduction. To participate, your employer must offer
direct deposit and permit you to electronically transfer a portion of your
salary. Contact your company payroll department to authorize the salary
reductions. If not available, you may consider our Money Line program.

Shares purchased through API are purchased on the day the electronic transfer is
received by the Fund.

HOW TO APPLY:
1: Complete an API Application. If you are receiving a government payment and
wish to participate in the API Program you must also complete the government's
Direct Deposit Sign-up Form. Call Shareholder Services at 1 (800) 423-4026 for
more information.

2: Complete an API Authorization Form.

3: Submit the paperwork to your registered representative or send it to:
ADMINISTRATIVE DATA MANAGEMENT CORP.
581 MAIN STREET
WOODBRIDGE, NJ 07095-1198.

+ WIRE  TRANSFERS:
You may purchase shares via a Federal Funds wire transfer from your bank account
into your EXISTING First Investors account. Federal Fund wire transfer proceeds
are not subject to a holding period and are available to you immediately upon
receipt, as long as we have been notified properly.



Shares will be purchased on the day we receive your wire transfer provided that
we have received adequate instructions and you have previously notified us that
the wire is on the way (by calling 1 (800) 423-4026). Your notification must
include the Federal Funds wire transfer confirmation number, the amount of the
wire, and the fund account number to receive same day credit. There are special
rules for money market fund accounts.

To wire Federal Funds to an existing First Investors account (other than money
markets), instruct your bank to wire your investment to:
FIRST FINANCIAL SAVINGS BANK, S.L.A.
ABA # 221272604
ACCOUNT # 0306142
YOUR NAME
YOUR FIRST INVESTORS FUND ACCOUNT #

(First Financial Savings Bank will change its name to First Investors Federal
Savings Bank.)


+ DISTRIBUTION
  CROSS-INVESTMENT:


<PAGE>


You can invest the dividends and capital gains from one fund account, excluding
the money market funds, into another fund account in the same class of shares.
The shares will be purchased at the net asset value on the day after the record
date of the distribution.

-You must invest at least $50 a month or $600 a year into a NEW  fund account.

-A signature guarantee is required if the ownership on both accounts is not
 identical.

You may establish a Distribution Cross-Investment service by contacting your
registered representative or calling Shareholder Services at 1 (800) 423-4026.

+ SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN PAYMENT INVESTMENTS: You can invest Systematic
Withdrawal Plan payments (see How to Sell Shares) from one fund account in
shares of another fund account in the same class of shares. -Payments are
invested without a sales charge. -A signature guarantee is required if the
ownership on both accounts is not
 identical.
-Both accounts must be in the same class of shares. -You must invest at least
$600 a year if into a new fund account. -You can invest on a monthly, quarterly,
semi-annual, or annual basis. Redemptions are suspended upon notification that
all account owners are deceased. Service will recommence upon receipt of written
alternative payment instructions and other required documents from the
decedent's legal representative.

HOW TO SELL SHARES
You can sell your shares on any day the New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE") is open
for regular trading. In the mutual fund industry, a sale is referred to as a
"redemption." Payment of redemption proceeds generally will be made within seven
days. If the shares being redeemed were recently purchased by check or
electronic funds transfer, payment may be delayed to verify that the check or
electronic funds transfer has been honored, which may take up to 15 days from
the date of purchase. Shareholders may not redeem shares by telephone or
electronic funds transfer unless the shares have been owned for at least 15
days.

Redemptions of shares are not subject to the 15 day verification period if the
shares were purchased via:
-Automatic Payroll Investment.
-FIC registered representative payroll checks.
-First Investors Life Insurance Company checks.
-Federal funds wire payments.

For trusts, estates, attorneys-in-fact, corporations, partnerships, and other
entities, additional documents are required to redeem shares.  Call
Shareholder Services at
1 (800) 423-4026 for more information.



WRITTEN REDEMPTIONS
You can write a letter of instruction or contact your registered
representative for a liquidation request form.  A written liquidation request
in





good order must include:


<PAGE>


1:  The name of the fund;

2:  Your account number;

3: The dollar amount, number of shares or percentage of the account you want to
redeem;

4: Share certificates (if they were issued to you);

5: Original signatures of all owners exactly as your account is registered; and

6: Signature guarantees, if required (see Signature Guarantee Policy).

If we are being asked to redeem a retirement account and transfer the proceeds
to another financial institution, we will also require a Letter of Acceptance
from the successor custodian before we effect the redemption.

For your protection, the Fund reserves the right to require additional
supporting legal documentation.

Written redemption requests should be mailed to:
ADMINISTRATIVE DATA MANAGEMENT CORP.
581 MAIN STREET
WOODBRIDGE, NJ 07095-1198.

If your redemption request is not in good order or information is missing, the
Transfer Agent will seek additional information and process the redemption on
the day it receives such information.


TELEPHONE REDEMPTIONS

You, or any person we believe is authorized to act on your behalf, may redeem
non-retirement shares which have been owned for at least 15 days by calling our
Special Services Department at 1 (800) 342-6221 from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., ET,
provided:

-Telephone privileges are available for your account registration and you
 have not declined telephone privileges (see Telephone Privileges);
-You do not hold share certificates (issued shares);
-The redemption check is made payable to the registered owner(s) or
 pre-designated bank;
-The redemption check is mailed to your address of record or predesignated
 bank account;
-Your address of record has not changed within the past 60 days;
-The redemption amount is $50,000 or less; AND
-The redemption amount, combined with the amount of all telephone redemptions
 made within the previous 30 days does not exceed
 $100,000.  Telephone  redemption orders received between 4:00-5:00p.m. will be
 processed on the following business day.
ELECTRONIC FUNDS        TRANSFER
The Electronic Funds Transfer ("EFT") service allows you to redeem shares and
electronically transfer proceeds to your bank account.

YOU MUST ENROLL IN THE ELECTRONIC FUNDS TRANSFER SERVICE AND PROVIDE COMPLETE
BANK ACCOUNT INFORMATION BEFORE USING THE PRIVILEGE. Signature guarantees of all
shareholders and all bank account owners are required. Please allow at least 10
business days for initial processing. We will send any proceeds during the
processing period to your address of record. Call your registered representative
or Shareholder Services at 1 (800) 423-4026 for an application. You may call
Shareholder Services or send written instructions to Administrative Data
Management Corp. to request an EFT redemption of shares which have been held at
least 15 days. Each EFT redemption:

1:  Must be electronically transferred to your pre-designated bank account;

2:  Must be at least $500;

3:  Cannot exceed $50,000; and

4: Cannot exceed $100,000 when added to the total amount of all EFT redemptions
   made within the previous 30 days.

If your redemption does not qualify for an EFT redemption, your redemption
proceeds will be mailed to your address of record.


<PAGE>


The Electronic Funds Transfer service may also be used to purchase shares (see
Money Line) and transfer systematic withdrawal payments (see Systematic
Withdrawal Plans) and dividend distributions (see Other Services) to your bank
account.



SYSTEMATIC                 WITHDRAWAL PLANS
Our Systematic Withdrawal Plan allows you to redeem a specific dollar amount,
number of shares, or percentage from your account on a regular basis. Your
payments can be mailed to you or a pre-authorized payee by check, transferred to
your bank account electronically (if you have enrolled in the EFT service) or
invested in shares of another FI fund in the same class of shares through our
Systematic Withdrawal Plan Payment investment service (see How to Buy Shares).

You can receive payments on a monthly, quarterly, semi-annual, or annual basis.
Your account must have a value of at least $5,000 in non-certificated shares
("unissued shares"). The $5,000 minimum account balance is waived for required
minimum distributions from retirement plan accounts, payments to First Investors
Life Insurance Company, and systematic investments into another eligible fund
account. The minimum Systematic Withdrawal Plan payment is $25 (waived for
Required Minimum Distributions on retirement accounts or FIL premium payments).

Once you establish the Systematic Withdrawal Plan, you should not make
additional investments into this account (except money market funds). Buying
shares during the same period as you are selling shares is not advantageous to
you because of sales charges.

If you own Class B shares, you may establish a Systematic Withdrawal Plan and
redeem up to 8% of the value of your account annually without a CDSC.

If you own Class B shares of a retirement account and you are receiving your
Required Minimum Distribution through a Systematic Withdrawal Plan, up to 8% of
the value of your account may be redeemed annually without a CDSC. However, if
your Required Minimum Distribution exceeds the 8% limit, the applicable CDSC
will be charged if the additional shares were held less than 3 years and you
have not reached age 701/2.

To establish a Systematic Withdrawal Plan, complete the appropriate section of
the account application or contact your registered representative or call
Shareholder Services at
1 (800) 423-4026.

EXPEDITED  WIRE
REDEMPTIONS
(MONEY MARKET FUNDS ONLY)
Enroll in our Expedited Redemption service to wire proceeds from your FI money
market account to your bank account. Call Shareholder Services at 1 (800)
423-4026 for an application or to discuss specific requirements.

Requests for redemptions by wire out of money market funds must be received in
writing or by phone prior to 12:00 p.m., ET on a day the NYSE is open for
trading. These days are referred to as "Trading Days" in this manual. Wire
Redemption orders received after 12:00 p.m., ET but before the close of regular
trading on the NYSE, or received on a day that the Federal Reserve system is
closed will be processed on the following business day.

-Each wire under $5,000 is subject to a $15 fee.

-Two wires of $5,000 or more are permitted without charge each month.  Each
 additional wire is $15.00.

-Wires must be directed to your pre-designated bank account.



HOW TO EXCHANGE SHARES


<PAGE>


The exchange privilege gives you the flexibility to change investments as your
goals change without incurring a sales charge. Since an exchange of
non-retirement fund shares is a redemption and a purchase, it creates a gain or
loss which is reportable for tax purposes. You should consult your tax advisor
before requesting an exchange. Read the prospectus of the FI Fund you are
purchasing carefully. Review the differences in objectives, policies, risk,
privileges and restrictions.

EXCHANGE METHODS

METHOD             STEPS TO FOLLOW

Through Your
Registered Representative Call your registered representative.

By Phone         Call Special Services from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., ET
1(800) 342-6221  Orders received after the close of the NYSE, usually
4:00 p.m., ET, are processed the following business day.

                 1. You must have telephone privileges.
                     (see Telephone Transactions.)

                 2. Certificate shares cannot be exchanged by phone.

                 3. For trusts, estates, attorneys-in-fact, corporations,
                    partnerships, and other entities, additional documents

                    are required and must be on file.

By Mail to:
ADM
581 MAIN STREET
WOODBRIDGE,         NJ 07095-1198 1. Send us written instructions signed by all
                    account owners exactly as the account is registered.

                 2. Include the name and account number of your fund.

                 3.  Indicate either the dollar amount, number of shares or
                     percent of the source account you want to exchange.

                 4.   Specify the existing account number or the name of the

                      new Fund you want to exchange into.

                 5. Include any outstanding share certificates for shares you

                         want to exchange.  A signature guarantee is required.

                 6. For trusts, estates, attorneys-in-fact, corporations,
                          partnerships, and other entities, additional
                                   documents are required.  Call Shareholder
                                   Services at 1(800) 423-4026.




EXCHANGE CONDITIONS
1: You may only exchange shares within the same class.

2: Exchanges can only be made into identically owned accounts.

3: Partial exchanges into a new fund account must meet the new fund's minimum
initial investment.

4: The fund you are exchanging into must be eligible for sale in your state.

5: If your request does not clearly indicate the amount to be exchanged or the
accounts involved, no shares will be exchanged.


<PAGE>


6: Amounts exchanged from a non-money market fund to a money market fund may be
exchanged back along with the dividends earned on that amount at net asset
value. Dividends earned from money market fund shares will be subject to a sales
charge.

7: If you are exchanging from a money market fund to a fund with a sales charge,
there will be a sales charge on any shares that were not previously subject to a
sales charge. Dividends earned on money market shares that were purchased by an
exchange from a fund with a sales charge, may be exchanged back at net asset
value. Your request must be in writing and include a statement acknowledging
that a sales charge will be paid.

8: If you exchange Class B shares of a fund for shares of a Class B money market
fund, the CDSC will not be imposed but the CDSC and the holding period used to
calculate the CDSC will carry over to the acquired shares.

9: FI Funds reserve the right to reject any exchange order which in the opinion
of the Fund is part of a market timing strategy. In the event that an exchange
is rejected, neither the redemption nor the purchase side of the exchange will
be processed.

10: If your exchange request is not in good order or information is missing, the
Transfer Agent will seek additional information and process the exchange on the
day it receives such information.

EXCHANGING FUNDS  WITH  AUTOMATIC INVESTMENTS  OR  SYSTEMATIC  WITHDRAWALS

Let us know if you want to continue automatic investments into the original fund
or the fund you are exchanging into ("receiving fund") or if you want to change
the amount or allocation. Also inform us if you wish to continue, terminate, or
change a preauthorized systematic withdrawal. Without specific instructions, we
will amend account privileges as outlined below:



                      EXCHANGE           EXCHANGE          EXCHANGE A
                      ALL SHARES TO      ALL SHARES TO     PORTION OF
                      ONE FUND           MULTIPLE          SHARES TO ONE OR
                      FUNDS              MULTIPLE
                                         FUNDS

MONEY LINE            ML moves to        ML stays with     ML stays with
(ML)                  Receiving Fund     Original Fund     Original Fund


AUTOMATIC PAYROLL      API moves to      API Stays with    API stays with
 INVESTMENT (API)      Receiving Fund    Original Fund     Original Fund


SYSTEMATIC             SWP moves to      SWP               SWP stays
WITHDRAWALS            Receiving Fund    Canceled          with Original Fund
(SWP)

WHEN AND HOW  FUND SHARES ARE PRICED
Each FI Fund prices its shares each day that the NYSE is open for trading. The
share price is calculated as of the close of trading on the NYSE (generally 4:00
p.m., ET).

Each Fund calculates the net asset value of each class of its shares separately
by taking the total value of class assets, subtracting class expenses, and
dividing the difference by the total number of shares in the class. The price
that you will pay for a share is the NAV plus any applicable front-end sales
charge. You receive the NAV price if you redeem or exchange your shares, less
any applicable CDSC.

Fund prices are on our website (www.firstinvestors.com) the next day. The prices
for our larger funds are also reported in many newspapers, including The Wall
Street Journal and The New York Times. Special pricing procedures are employed
during emergencies. For a description of these procedures you can request, free
of charge, a copy of a Statement of Additional Information.


<PAGE>


HOW PURCHASE,
REDEMPTION AND
EXCHANGE ORDERS
ARE PROCESSED AND PRICED
The processing and price for a purchase, redemption or exchange depends upon how
your order is placed. As indicated below, in certain instances, special rules
apply to money market transactions. Special rules also apply for emergency
conditions. These are described in the Statement of Additional Information.

+ PURCHASES:
Purchases that are made by written application or order are processed when they
are received in "good order" by our Woodbridge, NJ office. To be in good order,
all required paperwork must be completed and payment received. If your order is
received prior to the close of trading on the NYSE, it will receive that day's
price (except in the case of money market funds which are discussed in the
section below called Special Rules for Money Market Funds). This procedure
applies whether your purchase order is given to your registered representative
or mailed directly by you to our Woodbridge, NJ office.

As described previously in "How to Buy Shares," certain types of purchases can
only be placed by written application. For example, purchases in connection with
the opening of retirement accounts may only be made by written application.
Furthermore, rollovers of retirement accounts will be processed only when we
have received both written application and the proceeds of the rollover. Thus,
for example, if it takes 30 days for another fund group to send us the proceeds
of a retirement account, your purchase of First Investors funds will not occur
until we receive the proceeds.

Some types of purchases may be phoned or electronically transmitted to us via
Fund/SERV by your broker-dealer. If you give your order to a registered
representative before the close

of trading on the NYSE and the order is phoned to our Woodbridge, NJ office
prior to 5:00 p.m., ET, your shares will be purchased at that day's price
(except in the case of money market funds which are discussed in the section
below called Special Rules for Money Market Funds). If you are buying a First
Investors Fund through a broker-dealer other than First Investors, other
requirements may apply. Consult with your broker-dealer about its requirements.
Payment is due within three business days of placing an order by phone or
electronic means or the trade may be cancelled. (In such event, you will be
liable for any loss resulting from the cancellation.) To avoid cancellation of
your orders, you may arrange to open a money market account and use it to pay
for subsequent purchases.

Purchases made pursuant to our Automatic Investment Programs are processed as
follows:

-Money Line purchases are processed on the date you select on your
 application.

-Automatic Payroll Investment Service purchases are processed on the date that
 we receive funds from your employer.

+ REDEMPTIONS:
As described previously in "How To Sell Shares," certain redemption orders may
only be made by written instructions or application. Unless you have declined
Telephone Privileges, most non-retirement account redemptions can be made by
phone by you or your registered representative.

Written redemption orders will be processed when received in good order in our
Woodbridge, NJ office. Phone redemption orders will be processed when received
in good order in our Woodbridge, NJ office prior to 4:00 p.m., ET.


<PAGE>


If your redemption order is received prior to the close of trading on the NYSE,
you will receive that day's price. If you redeem through a broker-dealer other
than First Investors, other requirements may apply. Consult with your
broker-dealer about its requirements.

+ EXCHANGES:
Unless you have declined telephone privileges, you or your representative may
exchange shares by phone. Exchanges can also be made by written instructions.
Exchange orders are processed when we receive them in good order in our
Woodbridge, NJ office.

Exchange orders received in good order prior to the close of trading on the NYSE
will be processed at that day's prices.

+ ORDERS PLACED VIA FIRST INVESTORS REGISTERED REPRESENTATIVES: All orders
placed through a First Investors registered representative must be reviewed and
approved by a principal officer of the branch office before being mailed or
transmitted to the Woodbridge, NJ office.

+ ORDERS PLACED  VIA      DEALERS:
It is the responsibility of the Dealer to forward or transmit orders to the Fund
promptly and accurately. A fund will not be liable for any change in the price
per share due to the failure of the Dealer to place or pay for the order in a
timely fashion. Any such disputes must be settled between you and the Dealer.

SPECIAL RULES FOR MONEY MARKET FUNDS
Money market fund shares will not be purchased until the Fund receives Federal
Funds for the purchase. Federal Funds for a purchase will generally not be
received until the morning of the next Trading Day following the Trading Day on
which your purchase check or other form of payment is received in our
Woodbridge, NJ office. If a check is received in our Woodbridge, NJ office after
the close of regular trading on the NYSE, the Federal Funds for the purchase
will generally not be received until the morning of the second following Trading
Day.

If we receive a wire transfer for a purchase prior to 12:00 p.m., ET and you
have previously notified us that the wire is on the way (by calling 1 (800)
423-4026) the funds for the purchase will be deemed to have been received on
that same day. Your notification must include the Federal Funds wire transfer
confirmation number, the amount of the wire, and the money market fund account
number to receive same day credit. If we fail to receive such advance
notification, the funds for your purchase will not be deemed to have been
received until the morning of the next Trading Day following receipt of the
Federal Wire and your account information.

To wire funds to an existing First Investors money market account, instruct your
bank to wire your investment, as applicable, to:

CASH MANAGEMENT FUND

BANK OF NEW YORK

ABA #021000018
FI CASH MGMT. ACCOUNT 8900005696

FOR FURTHER CREDIT TO:  YOUR NAME
YOUR FIRST INVESTORS ACCOUNT #

TAX-EXEMPT MONEY MARKET FUND

BANK OF NEW YORK

ABA #021000018
FI TAX EXEMPT ACCOUNT 8900023198

FOR FURTHER CREDIT TO: YOUR NAME
YOUR FIRST INVESTORS ACCOUNT #


<PAGE>


Requests for redemptions by wire out of the money market funds must be received
in writing or by phone prior to 12:00 p.m., ET, on a Trading Day, to be
processed the same day. Wire redemption requests received after 12:00 p.m., ET,
but before the close of regular trading on the NYSE, will be processed the
following Trading Day.

There is no sales charge on Class A share money market fund purchases. However,
anytime you make a redemption from a Class A share money market account and
subsequently invest the proceeds in another eligible Class A share fund, the
purchase will incur a sales charge unless one has already been paid.

RIGHT TO REJECT
PURCHASE OR
EXCHANGE ORDERS
A fund reserves the right to reject or restrict any specific purchase or
exchange request if the fund determines that doing so is in the best interest of
the fund and its shareholders. Investments in a fund are designed for long-term
purposes and are not intended to provide a vehicle for short-term market timing.
The funds also reserve the right to reject any exchange that in the funds'
opinion is part of a market timing strategy. In the event that a fund rejects an
exchange request, neither the redemption nor the purchase side of the exchange
will be processed.

SIGNATURE
GUARANTEE POLICY
A signature guarantee protects you from the risk of a fraudulent signature and
is generally required for non-standard and large dollar transactions. A
signature guarantee may be obtained from eligible guarantor institutions
including banks, savings associations, credit unions and brokerage firms which
are members of the Securities Transfer Agents Medallion Program ("STAMP"), the
New York Stock Exchange Medallion Signature Program ("MSP"), or the Stock
Exchanges Medallion Program ("SEMP"). Please note that a notary public stamp or
seal is not acceptable.

+ SIGNATURE GUARANTEES
  ARE REQUIRED:
1: For redemptions over $50,000.

2: For redemption checks made payable to any person(s) other than the registered
shareholder(s) or any entity other than a major financial institution for the
benefit of the registered shareholder(s).

3: For redemption checks mailed to an address other than the address of record,
pre-authorized bank account, or a major financial institution on your behalf.

4: For redemptions when the address of record has changed within 60 days of the
request.

5: When a stock certificate is mailed to an address other than the address of
record or the dealer on the account.

6: When shares are transferred to a new registration.

7: When certificated (issued) shares are redeemed or exchanged.

8: To establish any EFT service.

9: For requests to change the address of record to a P.O. box or a "c/o" street
address.

10: If multiple account owners of one account give inconsistent instructions.

11: When a transaction requires additional legal documentation.


<PAGE>


12: When the authority of a representative of a corporation, partnership, trust,
or other entity has not been satisfactorily established.

13: When an address is updated on an account which has been coded "Do Not Mail"
because mail has been returned as undeliverable.

14: Any other instance whereby a fund or its transfer agent deems it
necessary as a matter of prudence.

TELEPHONE
SERVICES
TELEPHONE EXCHANGES AND REDEMPTIONS
1 (800) 342-6221
You automatically receive telephone privileges when you open a First Investors
individual, joint, or custodial account unless you decline the option on your
account application or send the Fund written instructions. For trusts, estates,
attorneys-in-fact, corporations, partnerships, and other entities, telephone
privileges are not automatically granted. You must complete additional
documentation. Call Shareholder Services at 1 (800) 423-4026 for assistance.

Telephone privileges allow you to exchange or redeem eligible shares and
authorize other transactions with a simple phone call. Your registered
representative may also use telephone privileges to execute your transactions.

+ SECURITY MEASURES:
For your protection, the following security measures are taken:

1: Telephone requests are recorded to verify accuracy.

2: Some or all of the following information is obtained:

-Account number.

-Address.

-Social security number.

-Other information as deemed necessary.

3: A written confirmation of each transaction is mailed to you.

We will not be liable for following instructions if we reasonably believe the
instructions are genuine based on our verification procedures.

+ ELIGIBILITY:
NON-RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS:
You can exchange or redeem shares of any non-retirement account by phone. Shares
must be uncertificated and owned for 15 days for telephone redemption. See "How
To Sell Shares" for additional information.

Telephone exchanges and redemptions are not available on guardianship and
conservatorship accounts.

RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS:
You can exchange shares of any eligible FI fund of any participant directed FI
prototype IRA, 403(b) or 401(k) Simplifier Plan. You may also exchange shares
from an individually registered non-retirement account to an IRA account
registered to the same owner (provided an IRA application is on file). Telephone
exchanges are permitted on 401(k) Flexible plans, money purchase pension plans
and profit sharing plans if a First Investors Qualified Retirement Plan
<PAGE>


Application is on file with the fund. Contact your registered representative or
call Shareholder Services at 1 (800) 423-4026 to obtain a Qualified Retirement
Plan Application. Telephone redemptions are not permitted on First Investors
retirement accounts.



During times of drastic economic or market changes, telephone redemptions or
exchanges may be difficult to implement. If you experience difficulty in making
a telephone exchange or redemption, you may send us a written request by regular
or express mail. The written request will be processed at the next determined
net asset value, less any applicable CDSC, when received in good order in our
Woodbridge, N.J. office.




SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
1 (800) 423-4026

PROVIDED YOU HAVE NOT DECLINED TELEPHONE PRIVILEGES, CALL US TO UPDATE OR
CORRECT:
-Your address or phone number.  For security purposes, the Fund will not
 honor telephone requests to change an address to a P.O. Box or "c/o" street
 address.

-Your birth date (important for retirement distributions).

-Your distribution option to reinvest or pay in cash or initiate cross
 reinvestment of dividends (non-retirement accounts only).

-The amount of your Money Line up to $999.99 per payment provided bank and fund
 account registrations are the same.

-The allocation of your Money Line or Automatic Payroll Investment  payment.

-The amount of your Systematic Withdrawal payment on non-retirement accounts.

TO REQUEST:
-A history of your account (the fee can be debited from your non-retirement
 account).

-A share certificate to be mailed to your address of record (non-retirement
 accounts only).

-Cancellation of your Systematic Withdrawal Plan (non-retirement accounts
 only).

-Money market fund draft checks (non-retirement accounts only). Additional
 written documentation may be required for certain registrations.

-A stop payment on a dividend, redemption or money market draft check.

-Reactivation of your Money Line (provided an application and voided check is
 on file).

-Suspension (up to six months) or cancellation of Money Line.

-A duplicate copy of a statement or tax form.

-Cancellation of cross-reinvestment of dividends.





OTHER SERVICES
+ REINSTATEMENT PRIVILEGE:


<PAGE>


If you sell some or all of your Class A or Class B shares, you may be entitled
to invest all or a portion of the proceeds in the same class of shares of a FI
fund within six months of the redemption without a sales charge.

If you invest proceeds into a new fund account, you must meet the fund's minimum
initial investment requirement.

If you invest all the proceeds from a Class B share redemption, you will be
credited, in additional shares, for the full amount of the CDSC. If you invest a
portion of a Class B share redemption, you will be credited with a pro-rated
percentage of the CDSC.

The reinstatement privilege does not apply to automated purchases, automated
redemptions, or reinstatements in Class B shares of less than $1,000.

Please notify us if you qualify for this privilege. For more information, call
Shareholder Services at 1 (800) 423-4026.

+ CERTIFICATE SHARES:
Every time you make a purchase of Class A shares, we will credit shares to your
fund account. We do not issue share certificates unless you specifically request
them. Certificates are not issued on any Class B shares, Class A money market
shares, or any shares in retirement accounts.

Having us credit shares on your behalf eliminates the expense of replacing lost,
stolen, or destroyed certificates. If a certificate is lost, stolen, or damaged,
you may be charged a replacement fee of the greater of 2% of the current value
of the certificated shares or $25.

In addition, certificated shares cannot be redeemed, exchanged, or transferred
until they are returned with your transaction request. The share certificate
must be properly endorsed and signature guaranteed.

+ MONEY MARKET FUND DRAFT CHECKS:
Free draft check writing privileges are available when you open a First
Investors Cash Management Fund or a First Investors Tax Exempt Money Market Fund
account. Checks may be written for a minimum of $500. Draft checks are not
available for Class B share accounts, retirement accounts, guardianships and
conservatorships. Complete the Money Market Fund Check Redemption section of the
account application to apply for draft checks. To order additional checks, call
Shareholder Services at 1 (800) 423-4026.

Additional documentation is required to establish check writing privileges
for trusts, corporations, partnerships and other entities.  Call Shareholder
Services at 1 (800) 423-4026 for further information.



FEE  TABLE:
Call Shareholder Services at 1 (800) 423-4026 or send your request to FIC,
Attn: Correspondence Dept., 581 Main Street, Woodbridge, NJ 07095-1198 to
request a copy of the following records:



 .

ACCOUNT HISTORY STATEMENTS:
1974 - 1982*    $10 per year fee

1983 - present  $5 total fee for all years

Current & Two Prior Years Free

*ACCOUNT HISTORIES ARE NOT AVAILABLE PRIOR TO 1974



CANCELLED CHECKS:
There is a $10 fee for a copy of a cancelled dividend, liquidation, or
investment check requested. There is a $15 fee for a copy of a cancelled money
market draft check.


<PAGE>


DUPLICATE TAX FORMS:
Current Year    Free

Prior Year(s)   $7.50 per tax form per year



+ RETURN MAIL:
If mail is returned to the fund marked undeliverable by the U.S. Postal Service
after two consecutive mailings, and the fund is unable to obtain a current
shareholder address, the account status will be changed to "Do Not Mail" to
discontinue future mailings and prevent unauthorized persons from obtaining
account information.

You can remove the "Do Not Mail" status on your account by submitting written
instructions including your current address signed by all shareholders with a
signature guarantee (see Signature Guarantee Policy). Additional requirements
may apply for certain accounts. Call Shareholder Services at 1 (800) 423-4026
for more information.

Returned dividend checks and other distributions will be reinvested in the fund
when an account's status has been changed to "Do Not Mail." No interest will be
paid on outstanding checks prior to reinvestment. All future dividends and other
distributions will be reinvested in additional shares until new instructions are
provided. If you cannot be located within a period of time mandated by your
state of residence your fund shares may be escheated to your state (in other
words turned over) in accordance with state laws governing abandoned property.

Prior to turning over assets to your state, the fund will seek to obtain a
current shareholder address in accordance with Securities and Exchange
Commission rules. A search company may be employed to locate a current address.
The fund may deduct the costs associated with the search from your account.



+ TRANSFERRING  SHARES:
A transfer is a change of share ownership from one customer to another. Unlike
an exchange, transfers occur within the same fund. You can transfer your shares
at any time. Partial transfers must meet the minimum initial investment
requirement of the fund.

To transfer shares, submit a letter of instruction including:

-Your account number.

-Dollar amount, percentage, or number of shares to be transferred.

-Existing account number receiving the shares (if any).

-The name(S), registration, and taxpayer identification number of the
customer receiving the shares.

-The signature of each account owner requesting the transfer with signature
guarantee(S).

If First Investors is your broker-dealer, we will request that the transferee
complete a Master Account Agreement to establish a brokerage account with First
Investors Corporation and validate his or her social security number to avoid
back-up withholding. If the transferee declines to complete a MAA, all
transactions in the account must be on an unsolicited basis and the account will
be so coded.

Depending upon your account registration, additional documentation may be
required to transfer shares. Transfers due to the death of a shareholder require
additional documentation. Please call our Shareholder Services Department at 1
(800) 423-4026 for specific transfer requirements before initiating a request.

A transfer is a change of ownership and may trigger a taxable event. You should
consult your tax advisor before initiating a transfer.



ACCOUNT STATEMENTS


<PAGE>


TRANSACTION
CONFIRMATION STATEMENTS
You will receive a confirmation statement immediately after most transactions.
These include:

-dealer purchases.

-check investments.

-Federal Funds wire purchases.

-redemptions.

-exchanges.

-transfers.

-systematic withdrawals.

Money Line and Automatic Payroll Investment purchases are not confirmed for each
transaction. They will appear on your next regularly scheduled monthly or
quarterly statement (see Dividend Payment Schedule under "Dividends and
Distributions").

A separate confirmation statement is generated for each fund account you own. It
provides:

-Your fund account number.

-The date of the transaction.

-A description of the transaction (PURCHASE, REDEMPTION, ETC.).

-The number of shares bought or sold for the transaction.

-The dollar amount of the transaction.

-The dollar amount of the dividend payment (IF APPLICABLE).

-The total share balance in the account.

-The dollar amount of any dividends or capital gains paid.

-The number of shares held by you, held for you (INCLUDING ESCROW SHARES), and
 the total number of shares you own.

The confirmation statement also may provide a perforated Investment Stub with
your preprinted name, registration, and fund account number for future
investments.


MASTER  ACCOUNT
STATEMENTS
If First Investors Corporation is your broker, you will receive a Master Account
Statement for all your identically owned First Investors fund accounts on at
least a quarterly basis. The Master Account Statement will also include a recap
of any First Investors Life Insurance accounts you may own. Joint accounts
registered under your taxpayer identification number will appear on a separate
Master Account Statement but may be mailed in the same envelope upon request.

The Master Account Statement provides the following information for each First
Investors fund you own:

-fund name.

-fund's current market value.

-total distributions paid year-to-date.

-total number of shares owned.


<PAGE>


ANNUAL  AND
SEMI-ANNUAL  REPORTS
You will also receive an Annual and a Semi-Annual Report. These financial
reports show the assets, liabilities, revenues, expenses, and earnings of the
fund as well as a detailed accounting of all portfolio holdings. You will
receive one report per household.



DIVIDENDS AND
DISTRIBUTIONS
DIVIDENDS  AND
DISTRIBUTIONS
For funds that declare daily dividends, except money market funds, you start
earning dividends on the day your purchase is made. For FI money market fund
purchases, including Money Line and API purchases, you start earning dividends
on the day Federal Funds are credited to your fund account. For exchanges into
the money market funds, you start earning dividends on the day following the
Trading Day on which an exchange is processed. No dividends are earned on
exchanges out of the money market funds on the Trading Day on which an exchange
is processed. The funds declare dividends from net investment income and
distribute the accrued earnings to shareholders as noted below:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


DIVIDEND PAYMENT SCHEDULE
<S>                                 <C>                           <C>

MONTHLY:                            QUARTERLY:                    ANNUALLY (IF ANY):
Cash Management Fund                Blue Chip Fund                Focused Equity Fund
Fund for Income                     Growth & Income Fund          Global Fund
Government Fund                     Total Return Fund             Mid-Cap Opportunity Fund
Insured Intermediate Tax-Exempt     Utilities Income Fund         Special Situations Fund
Insured Tax Exempt Fund
Investment Grade Fund
Multi-State Insured Tax Free Fund
New York Insured Tax Free Fund
Tax-Exempt Money Market Fund
</TABLE>


Capital gains distributions, if any, are paid annually, usually near the end of
the fund's fiscal year. On occasion, more than one capital gains distribution
may be paid during one year.

Dividend and capital gains distributions are automatically reinvested to
purchase additional fund shares unless otherwise instructed. Dividend payments
of less than $5.00 are automatically reinvested to purchase additional fund
shares.


BUYING  A  DIVIDEND
If you buy shares shortly before the record date of the dividend, the entire
dividend you receive may be taxable even though a part of the distribution is
actually a return of your purchase price. This is called "buying a dividend."

 There is no advantage to buying a dividend because a fund's net asset value per
share is reduced by the amount of the dividend.


<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

TAX FORMS
<S>                <C>                                                               <C>

TAX FORM                       DESCRIPTION                                           MAILED BY
1099-DIV   Consolidated report lists all taxable dividend and capital gains          January 31
           distributions for all of the  shareholder's accounts.  Also includes
           foreign taxes paid and any federal income tax withheld  due to
           backup withholding.

1099-B     Lists proceeds from all redemptions including systematic                  January 31
           withdrawals and exchanges. A separate form is issued for each fund
           account. Includes amount of federal income tax withheld due to backup
           withholding.

1099-R     Lists taxable distributions from a retirement account. A separate         January 31
           form is issued for each fund account. Includes federal income
             tax withheld due to IRS withholding requirements.

5498       Provided to shareholders who made an annual IRA                           May 31
           contribution or rollover purchase. Also provides the account's
             fair market value as of the last business day of the previous year.
           A separate form is issued for each fund account.

1042-S     Provided to non-resident alien shareholders to report the amount          March 15
           of fund dividends paid and the amount of federal taxes withheld.
           A separate form is issued for each fund account.

Cost Basis Uses the "average cost-single category" method to show the cost           January 31
Statement    basis of any shares sold or exchanged. Information is provided to
             assist shareholders in calculating capital gains or losses.
           A separate statement, included with Form 1099-B, is issued for each
             fund account. This statement is not reported to the IRS and does
             not include money market funds or retirement accounts.

Tax Savings  Consolidated report lists all amounts not subject to federal,          January 31
Report for state and local income tax for all the shareholder's accounts.
Non-Taxable Also includes any amounts subject to alternative minimum tax.
Income

Tax Savings  Provides the percentage of income paid by each fund that may           January 31
Summary be exempt from state income tax.
</TABLE>



THE OUTLOOK

Today's strategies for tomorrow's goals are brought into focus in the Outlook,
the quarterly newsletter for clients of First Investors Corporation. This
informative tool discusses the products and services we offer to help you take
advantage of current market conditions and tax law changes. The OUTLOOK'S
straight forward approach and timely articles make it a valuable resource. As
always, your registered representative is available to provide you with
additional information and assistance. Material contained in this publication
should not be considered legal, financial, or other professional advice.







(This page Intentionally Left Blank)


<PAGE>


                              Principal Underwriter
                           First Investors Corporation
                                 95 Wall Street
                               New York, NY 10005
                                 1-212-858-8000

                                 Transfer Agent
                      Administrative Data Management Corp.
                                 581 Main Street
                              Woodbridge, NJ 07095
                                 1-800-423-4026






<PAGE>

                                INDEX TO EXHIBITS

Exhibit
Number        Description
------        -----------

23(a)         Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust(1)

23(b)         By-laws(1)

23(c)         Shareholders' rights are  contained  in (a) Articles III, VIII, X,
              XI and XII of Registrant's  Amended and  Restated  Declaration  of
              Trust dated  October 28,  1986,  as amended  September  22,  1994,
              previously  filed as Exhibit  99.B1 to  Registrant's  Registration
              Statement  and (b)  Articles  III and V of  Registrant's  By-laws,
              previously  filed as Exhibit  99.B2 to  Registrant's  Registration
              Statement.

23(d)(i)      Investment Advisory Agreement between Registrant  and  Executive
              Investors Management Company, Inc.(1)

23(d)(ii)     Consent to Transfer of Investment Advisory Agreement - Filed
              herewith

23(e)         Underwriting Agreement between Registrant and Executive Investors
              Corporation(1)

23(f)         Bonus or Profit Sharing Contracts -- None

23(g)         Supplement to Custodian Agreement between Registrant and  The Bank
              of New York(1)

23(h)(i)      Administration Agreement between Registrant,  Executive  Investors
              Corporation and Administrative Data Management Corp.(1)

23(h)(ii)     Schedule A to Administration Agreement(2)

23(h)(iii)    Transfer Agency Agreement - Filed herewith

23(i)         Opinion and Consent of Counsel - To be filed

23(j)(i)      Consent of Independent Accountants - Filed herewith

23(j)(ii)     Powers of Attorney1

23(k)         Omitted Financial Statements -- None

23(l)         Initial Capital Agreements -- None

23(m)(i)      Amended and Restated Class A Distribution Plan(1)

23(m)(ii)     Amended and Restated Class A Distribution Plan - Filed herewith

23(m)(iii)    Class B Distribution Plan - Filed herewith

23(n)         Rule 18f-3 Plan - To be filed

23(o)         Reserved


<PAGE>


23(p)         Codes of Ethics(3)

23(p)(ii)     Amended Code of Ethics - Filed herewith

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

(1)    Incorporated  by  reference  from  Post-Effective  Amendment  No.  17  to
       Registrant's  Registration  Statement (File No.  33-10648) filed on April
       24, 1996.

(2)    Incorporated  by  reference  from  Post-Effective  Amendment  No.  18  to
       Registrant's  Registration Statement (File No. 33-10648) filed on May 15,
       1997.

(3)    Incorporated  by  reference  from  Post-Effective  Amendment  No.  23  to
       Registrant's  Registration  Statement (File No.  33-10648) filed on April
       28, 2000.

(4)    Incorporated  by  reference  from  Post-Effective  Amendment  No.  24  to
       Registrant's  Registration Statement (File No. 33-10648) filed on October
       19, 2000.


<PAGE>


                                                            EXHIBIT 99.23(d)(ii)

              CONSENT TO TRANSFER OF INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT

      WHEREAS,  Executive Investors Trust (the "Trust"),  an open end investment
company  registered  under the  Investment  Company Act of 1940,  and  Executive
Investors  Management Company ("EIMCO"),  an investment adviser registered under
the  Investment  Advisers  Act of  1940,  entered  into an  investment  advisory
agreement (the "Agreement"), dated June 13, 1994, pursuant to which EIMCO serves
as  investment  adviser to the Trust's  single  portfolio,  currently  named the
Insured Tax Exempt Fund II; and

      WHEREAS, EIMCO agrees to transfer its rights, duties and obligations under
the Agreement to First Investors  Management  Company  ("FIMCO"),  an investment
adviser registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940; and

      WHEREAS,  EIMCO and  FIMCO are both  wholly  owned  subsidiaries  of First
Investors  Consolidated  Corporation,  and  share  the  same  relevant  offices,
employees and resources; and

      WHEREAS,  this transfer of the  Agreement  shall not alter or modify the
terms or conditions of the Agreement; and

      WHERAS,  the Trustees of the Trust,  including the  independent  Trustees,
have unanimously approved this transfer of the Agreement;

      NOW  THEREFORE,  the Trust,  EIMCO and FIMCO agree to the  above-described
transfer of the Agreement  and to the  assumption of all of rights and duties of
the Agreement by FIMCO, as of this date, December 18, 2000.

                                                For the Trust:

                                                By:  Glenn O. Head
                                                     --------------
                                                Title:  President

                                                For the Transferor: EIMCO

                                                By:  Kathryn S. Head
                                                     ---------------
                                                Title:  President

                                                For the Transferee:  FIMCO

                                                By:  Kathryn S. Head
                                                     ---------------
                                                Title:  President


                                      -11-
<PAGE>



                                                           EXHIBIT 99.23(h)(iii)

                            TRANSFER AGENT AGREEMENT
                            ------------------------

      This  Agreement,  dated as of the 20th day of May 1999, made by each FIRST
INVESTORS  investment company listed on Schedule A, as amended from time to time
("Fund"), and ADMINISTRATIVE DATA MANAGEMENT CORP., a corporation duly organized
and existing under the laws of the State of New York ("ADM").

                                WITNESSETH THAT:
                                ---------------

      WHEREAS,  ADM represents that it is currently registered and licensed with
the  appropriate  authorities to provide  services as a transfer agent of mutual
funds, and will remain so registered for the duration of the Agreement; and

      WHEREAS,  the Fund  desires to employ ADM to provide  transfer  agency and
related services under the terms and conditions  described in this Agreement and
ADM is willing to provide such services;

      NOW,  THEREFORE,  in  consideration  of the mutual  promises and covenants
contained herein,  the parties hereto,  intending to be legally bound, do hereby
agree as follows:

      1.  APPOINTMENT.  The Fund hereby appoints ADM as its registrar,  transfer
agent, dividend disbursing agent,  shareholder servicing agent and administrator
of its dividend  reinvestment,  share  accumulation,  systematic  withdrawal and
automated  payment programs  (collectively its "Transfer Agent") and ADM accepts
such  appointment and agrees to act in such capacity upon the terms set forth in
this Agreement.

      2.  DEFINITIONS.  As used in this Agreement  capitalized  terms have the
meanings specified below:


      A)    "Fund"  means any of the Funds set forth in Schedule A existing  now
            or in the future that becomes a party to this Agreement, and;

      B)    "Shares"  means the issued and  outstanding  shares of  beneficial
            interest, and any      fractions thereof, of the Fund;


      C)    "Shareholder" means the registered owner of Shares or the beneficial
            owner of Shares if the name of the  beneficial  owner is recorded on
            the master security holder files;

      D)    "Account"  means a separate  record  established  on ADM's books for
            each Shareholder in the Fund which identifies the legal registration
            and number of Shares owned.


<PAGE>


      3.  RESPONSIBILITIES  OF ADM.  ADM in its  capacity  as  Transfer  Agent
will perform the usual duties and functions of a stock  transfer agent for the
Fund.  Among other things, it will:

      A)    maintain  stock registry and record thereon the Shares and fractions
            thereof of both issued and  unissued  Shares for each  Shareholder's
            Account;

      B)    open, maintain, service and close Accounts of Shareholders;


      C)    issue,   redeem,   exchange  and   transfer   Shares  in  Accounts
            established on its books and records;


      D)    process  initial and  subsequent  payments on each day the Fund is
            open for trading;


      E)    maintain  a  record  of  sales  of  Shares  for  use by the  Fund in
            complying with state and federal registration requirements;

      F)    deliver to the underwriter all payments received by ADM;

      G)    calculate  the  amounts  of  Shares to be  issued,  the  amounts  of
            commissions  owed  to  dealers,  and the  amounts  to be paid to the
            underwriter;

      H)    answer   telephone  and  written   inquiries  from   Shareholders,
            securities brokers and others;

      I)    calculate the amount of, and reinvest  dividends  and  distributions
            declared upon Shares into Shareholder  Accounts or, upon Shareholder
            election, pay such dividends and distributions in cash;

      J)    furnish   to   Shareholders   monthly   or   quarterly   statements,
            confirmations  of  transactions  in Shares,  prospectuses,  and such
            other communications as may be requested by the Fund;

      K)    deduct and pay the  Internal  Revenue  Service and other  payees the
            required  amounts of tax  withholdings in accordance with applicable
            laws, rules and regulations;

      L)    mail to Shareholders such tax forms,  notices, and other information
            relating to purchases, redemptions,  dividends and distributions, as
            required by applicable laws, rules and regulations;

      M)    prepare,  maintain  and file with the Internal  Revenue  Service and
            other appropriate taxing authorities  reports relating to purchases,
            redemptions,  dividends and distributions, as required by applicable
            laws, rules and regulations;


                                      -2-
<PAGE>


      N)    mail annual and semi-annual  reports and prospectuses  prepared by
            or on behalf of the Fund to Shareholders;

      O)    mail notices of Shareholder meetings,  proxies, proxy statements and
            other related materials upon request by the Fund;

      P)    maintain a disaster  recovery  site for emergency use and a separate
            off-site storage facility for backup computer files and data;

      Q)    maintain all records  required to be kept by applicable  laws, rules
            and regulations  relating to the services to be performed under this
            Agreement; and,

      R)    comply with all other laws,  rules and regulations that apply to ADM
            as the result of the services  that it is required to perform  under
            this Agreement.

      4.  DUTY OF CARE. ADM shall exercise due care and  diligence,  act in good
  faith,  and  comply  with the terms and  conditions  contained  in the  Fund's
  prospectuses,  statements of additional information,  shareholder applications
  and all  applicable  laws,  rules and  regulations  in performing the services
  required under this Agreement.

      5.  LIMITATIONS  ON  LIABILITY.  ADM shall not be liable  for any  losses,
claims or damages (collectively, "Damages") arising out of or in connection with
ADM's  performance or failure to perform its duties under this Agreement  except
to the extent that such Damages arise out of its negligence,  reckless disregard
of its duties, bad faith or willful misfeasance.

      Without limiting the generality of the foregoing,  ADM shall not be liable
for:

      A)    any Damages caused by delays,  errors,  or loss of data occurring by
            reason of  circumstances  beyond ADM's  control,  including  but not
            limited  to  acts  of  civil  or  military   authorities,   national
            emergencies, labor difficulties,  acts of God, insurrections,  wars,
            riots  or   failures   of  the  mails,   transportation   providers,
            communications providers or power suppliers; or,

      B)    any taxes,  assessments or governmental  charges which may be levied
            or assessed on any basis  whatsoever in connection with the services
            performed  under this Agreement,  except for taxes assessed  against
            ADM in its corporate capacity based upon its compensation hereunder.

6.    INDEMNIFICATION.
      ----------------

A)          The Fund shall  indemnify and hold ADM harmless  against any Damages
            or expenses  (including  reasonable  attorneys fees) incurred in any
            action,  suit or proceeding  brought  against it by any person other
            than the Fund,  including a  Shareholder,  based upon ADM's services


                                      -3-
<PAGE>


            for the Fund or its  Shareholders,  if the  Damages  sought  did not
            result from ADM's negligence, reckless disregard for its duties, bad
            faith or willful misfeasance.

      B)    The  Transfer  Agent  shall not pay or settle any  claim,  demand,
            expense or  liability to which it may seek  indemnity  pursuant to
            paragraph  (A)  above  an  ("Indemnifiable   Claim")  without  the
            express  written  consent of the Fund.  The  Transfer  Agent shall
            notify  the  Fund  promptly  of  receipt  of  notification  of  an
            Indemnifiable  Claim.  Unless the Fund notifies the Transfer Agent
            within 30 days of receipt of Written Notice of such  Indemnifiable
            Claim that the Fund does not intend to defend  such  Indemnifiable
            Claim,   the  Fund  shall  defend  the  Transfer  Agent  for  such
            Indemnifiable  Claim.  The Fund shall have the right to defend any
            Indemnifiable  Claim  at  its  own  expense,  such  defense  to be
            conducted by counsel selected by the Fund.  Further,  the Transfer
            Agent may join the Fund in such  defense at the  Transfer  Agent's
            own  expense,  but to the extent  that it shall so desire the Fund
            shall  direct  such  defense.  If the Fund shall fail or refuse to
            defend, pay or settle an Indemnifiable  Claim, the Transfer Agent,
            at the Fund's expense,  consistent with the limitation  concerning
            attorney's  fees  expressed  in (A)  above,  may  provide  its own
            defense.

      7. DELEGATION OF DUTIES.  ADM may from time to time in its sole discretion
delegate some or all of its duties  hereunder to any affiliate or entity,  which
shall perform such functions as the agent of ADM;  provided,  however,  that the
delegation of any of ADM's duties under this Agreement  shall not relieve ADM of
any of its responsibilities or liabilities under this Agreement.

      8. INSURANCE. ADM shall maintain insurance of the types and in the amounts
deemed by it to be appropriate for the services that it provides to the Fund. To
the extent that  policies of  insurance  may provide for  coverage of claims for
liability or indemnity by the parties set forth in this Agreement, the contracts
of insurance shall take  precedence,  and no provision of the Agreement shall be
construed to relieve an insurer of any obligation to pay claims to the Fund, ADM
or any other  insured  party which  could  otherwise  be a covered  claim in the
absence of any provision of this Agreement.

      9. BOOKS AND RECORDS.  The books and records  pertaining to the Fund which
are in the  possession  of the Transfer  Agent shall be the property of the Fund
and shall be returned to the Fund or its designee upon  request.  Such books and
records shall be prepared and maintained as required by applicable laws,  rules,
and regulations. The Fund, or its authorized representatives,  shall have access
to such  books and  records  at all times  during the  Transfer  Agent's  normal
business hours.  Upon request of the Fund,  copies of any such books and records
shall be provided  by the  Transfer  Agent to the Fund or the Fund's  authorized
representative or designee at the Fund's expense.

                                      -4-
<PAGE>


            10.  RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE FUND.  The Fund is  responsible for:

      A)    providing  ADM on an ongoing  basis with its  current  prospectuses,
            statements of additional  information,  shareholder manuals,  annual
            and semi-annual reports, proxy notices and proxy statements;

      B)    notifying ADM upon  declaration of each dividend and distribution of
            the date of its  declaration,  the amount  payable  per  Share,  the
            record date, the payment date, the reinvestment date, and the price;

      C)    transferring,  or causing  the Fund's  Custodian  or  Custodians  to
            transfer,  to ADM by each  payment  date,  the  total  amount of the
            dividend or distribution currently payable in cash; and

      D)    providing  ADM with its net asset value on each day the Fund is open
            for business and the prices which are applicable to Shareholders who
            are entitled to purchase Shares at reduced offering prices.


      11.  COMPENSATION.  The  Fund  agrees  to pay ADM  compensation  for its
services  and to reimburse it for expenses as set forth in Schedule B attached
hereto,  or as shall be set forth in amendments  to such schedule  approved by
the parties to this Agreement.

      12. ADDITIONAL SERVICES AND COMPENSATION. The Fund may with the consent of
ADM decide to employ ADM to perform  additional  services  and special  projects
which are not  covered  by this  Agreement,  such as proxy  solicitation,  proxy
tabulation or special research. In such circumstances,  the terms and conditions
under which ADM will perform such services and the  compensation it will receive
will be set by mutual agreement.

      13. HOLIDAYS.  Nothing contained in this Agreement is intended to or shall
require ADM in any capacity  hereunder to perform any functions or duties on any
holiday  or other  day of  special  observances  on  which  the Fund and ADM are
closed.  Functions  or duties  normally  scheduled  to be performed on such days
shall be performed  on, and as of, the next  business day on which both the Fund
and ADM are open.

      14. COOPERATION WITH ACCOUNTANTS.  The Transfer Agent shall cooperate with
the Fund's  independent  public accountants and shall take all reasonable action
in the  performance of its  obligations  under this Agreement to assure that the
necessary  information is made available to such  accountants for the expression
of their opinion as such may be required by the Fund from time to time.

      15. CONFIDENTIALITY. The Transfer Agent agrees on behalf of itself and its
employees to treat  confidentially all records and other information relative to
the Fund and its prior,  present or potential  Shareholders  and relative to the
Fund's investment  advisers,  sub- advisers or underwriters and their present or


                                      -5-
<PAGE>


potential  customers;  provided,  however that the  Transfer  Agent may disclose
information  in  response  to a lawful  subpoena,  request  from a  governmental
authority, or other legal process or with the consent of the Fund.

      16. ENFORCEMENT OF AGREEMENT.  Notwithstanding any provision of the law to
the contrary,  ADM hereby waives any right to enforce this Agreement against the
individual and separate  assets of any  Shareholder of the Fund. With respect to
any  obligations of the Fund arising out of this  Agreement,  ADM shall look for
payment or satisfaction  of any obligation  solely to the assets and property of
the Fund.

      17. ASSIGNMENT. This Agreement shall extend to, and shall be binding upon,
the  parties  hereto and their  respective  successors  and  assigns;  provided,
however,  that this  Agreement  shall not be assignable by any party without the
written  consent  of the  other.  In the case of the  Fund,  any  consent  to an
assignment must be approved by the Board of Directors/Trustees of the Fund.

      18.  TERMINATION.  This  Agreement  may be terminated by any party to this
Agreement on at least sixty (60) days advance  written  notice.  If ADM fails at
any time to maintain the  necessary  registrations  or licenses  required to act
lawfully as the Fund's  Transfer  Agent,  the Fund may terminate  this Agreement
upon five  days  written  notice.  In the event  that ADM shall  terminate  this
Agreement,  it shall  continue  to  perform  the  services  required  under this
Agreement at the request of the Fund until a replacement  is appointed.  In such
case,  ADM shall be entitled to receive all the payments and  reimbursements  to
which it is entitled under this Agreement.

      19.  AMENDMENT.  This  Agreement  may  only  be  amended  by  a  written
instrument approved by both parties.

      20.  NON-EXCLUSIVITY.  The parties understand and agree that ADM may offer
services,  including the types of services  covered by this Agreement,  to other
parties including  non-affiliated mutual funds, provided that such activities do
not adversely  affect ADM's ability to perform the services to the Fund that are
required by this Agreement.

      21.  MISCELLANEOUS.  This  Agreement  may be  executed  in  one or  more
counterparts,  each of which when so executed  shall be deemed to be original,
but  such  counterparts  shall  together  constitute  but  one  and  the  same
instrument.  This Agreement  shall be construed in accordance with the laws of
the State of New York.


                                      -6-
<PAGE>


      IN WITNESS  WHEREOF,  the parties  hereto have cause this  Agreement to be
signed by their duly  authorized  officers and their seals hereunto duly affixed
and attested as of the day and the year first above written.

ATTEST:                                   FIRST INVESTORS FUNDS



/s/ C. DURSO                              BY:  /s/ Glenn O. Head
------------------------------------           ------------------------
C Durso, Secretary                             Glenn O. Head, President




ATTEST:                                   ADMINISTRATIVE DATA
                                              MANAGEMENT CORP.



/S/ LARRY R. LAVOIE                             BY:  /s/ Kathryn S. Head
------------------------------------                 -------------------
Larry R. Lavoie, Assistant Secretary                 Kathryn  S.  Head,
President


                                      -7-
<PAGE>


                            TRANSFER AGENT AGREEMENT
                                   SCHEDULE A

                              CURRENT LIST OF FUNDS
                              ---------------------

Executive Investors Trust
      First Investors Insured Tax Exempt Fund II
First Investors Cash Management Fund, Inc.
First Investors Fund For Income, Inc.
First Investors Global Fund, Inc.
First Investors Government Fund, Inc.
First Investors Insured Tax Exempt Fund, Inc.
First Investors Life Series Fund
      Life Blue Chip Fund
      Life Cash  Management Fund
      Life Discovery  Fund Life
      Focused Equity Fund
      Life Government Fund
      Life Growth Fund
      Life High Yield Fund
      Life International Securities Fund
      Life Investment Grade Fund
      Life Target  Maturity 2007
      Life Target  Maturity 2010
      Life Target Maturity 2015
      Life Utilities Income Fund

First Investors Multi-State Insured Tax Free Fund
      Arizona Fund,  California Fund,  Colorado Fund,  Connecticut Fund, Florida
      Fund,  Georgia Fund,  Maryland Fund,  Massachusetts  Fund,  Michigan Fund,
      Minnesota Fund,  Missouri Fund, New Jersey Fund, North Carolina Fund, Ohio
      Fund, Oregon Fund, Pennsylvania Fund, Virginia Fund
First Investors New York Insured Tax Free Fund, Inc.
First Investors Series Fund
      First Investors Blue Chip Fund
      First Investors Insured Intermediate Tax Exempt Fund
      First Investors Investment Grade Fund
      First Investors Special Situations Fund
      First Investors Total Return Fund
First Investors Series Fund II, Inc.
      First Investors Focused Equity Fund
      First Investors Growth & Income Fund
      First Investors Mid-Cap Opportunity Fund
      First Investors All-Cap Growth Fund
      First Investors Utilities Income Fund
First Investors Special Bond Fund, Inc.
First Investors Tax-Exempt Money Market Fund, Inc.
First Investors U.S. Government Plus Fund
      1st  Fund


                                      -8-
<PAGE>


                                                                            6/00


<PAGE>


                            TRANSFER AGENT AGREEMENT
                                   SCHEDULE B

                                  COMPENSATION
                                  ------------

FEES AND CHARGES:
----------------

      The Fund shall pay the following fees and charges of  Administrative  Data
Management Corp. for its services under the Transfer Agent Agreement.

      For all Funds except First  Investors  Cash  Management  Fund,  Inc. and
First Investors Tax-Exempt Money Market Fund, Inc.:

Monthly  Account  Maintenance                   $0.75 per  account
New  Accounts                                   $5.00 for each account
Payments                                        $0.75 for each payment
Liquidations and Withdrawals                    $5.00 per transaction
Exchanges                                       $5.00 per transaction
Transfers                                       $10.00 per transaction
Certificates  Issued                            $3.00 per certificate issued
Systematic  Withdrawal Checks                   $1.00 per check
Dividend Processing                             $0.45 per dividend
Reports  Requested by Government  Agency        $1.00 per account
Shareholder Service Calls                       $4.00 per call
Correspondence                                  $20.00 per item

      First  Investors  Cash   Management   Fund,  Inc.  and  First  Investors
Tax-Exempt Money Market Fund, Inc.:

Monthly Account Maintenance                     $2.00 per account
Reports Requested by Government Agency          $1.00 per account

EXPENSES:
--------

      In  addition  to the above  fees and  charges,  the Fund  shall  reimburse
Administrative  Data Management Corp. for all out-of-pocket  costs including but
not  limited to the costs of postage,  insurance,  forms,  envelopes,  telephone
lines and other similar items,  counsel fees, including fees for the preparation
of the Transfer Agent Agreement and review of the Fund's registration statements
and application forms.

                                                                         5/20/99

                                      -9-





© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission