FRANKLIN EQUITY FUND
497, 1999-12-16
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FRANKLIN
EQUITY FUND

CLASS A, B & C

STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
NOVEMBER 1, 1999, AS AMENDED JANUARY 1, 2000

[Insert Franklin Templeton Ben Head]
P.O. BOX 997151, SACRAMENTO, CA 95899-9983 1-800/DIAL BEN(R)
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This Statement of Additional Information (SAI) is not a prospectus.  It contains
information in addition to the information in the fund's prospectus.  The fund's
prospectus,  dated  November  1,  1999,  which we may  amend  from time to time,
contains the basic information you should know before investing in the fund. You
should read this SAI together with the fund's prospectus.

The audited  financial  statements  and  auditor's  report in the fund's  Annual
Report  to  Shareholders,   for  the  fiscal  year  ended  June  30,  1999,  are
incorporated by reference (are legally a part of this SAI).

For a free  copy of the  current  prospectus  or  annual  report,  contact  your
investment representative or call 1-800/DIAL BEN (1-800/342-5236).

CONTENTS

Goals and Strategies..................................     2
Risks.................................................     8
Officers and Directors................................    11
Management and Other Services.........................    14
Portfolio Transactions................................    15
Distributions and Taxes...............................    16
Organization, Voting Rights
 and Principal Holders................................    17
Buying and Selling Shares.............................    18
Pricing Shares .......................................    24
The Underwriter ......................................    25
Performance ..........................................    27
Miscellaneous Information ............................    29
Description of Ratings ...............................    29

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MUTUAL FUNDS, ANNUITIES, AND OTHER INVESTMENT PRODUCTS:

o    ARE NOT FEDERALLY INSURED BY THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION, THE
     FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD, OR ANY OTHER AGENCY OF THE U.S. GOVERNMENT;

o    ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED OR ENDORSED BY, ANY BANK;

o    ARE SUBJECT TO INVESTMENT RISKS, INCLUDING THE POSSIBLE LOSS OF PRINCIPAL.
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134 SAI 01/00

GOALS AND STRATEGIES
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The fund's principal investment goal is capital appreciation. Its secondary goal
is to provide current income return through the receipt of dividends or interest
from its investments.  These goals are fundamental,  which means they may not be
changed without shareholder approval.

The following describes the various types of securities the fund may buy.

EQUITY  SECURITIES  The purchaser of an equity  security  typically  receives an
ownership interest in the company as well as certain voting rights. The owner of
an equity security may participate in a company's success through the receipt of
dividends  which are  distributions  of  earnings  by the company to its owners.
Equity  security owners may also  participate in a company's  success or lack of
success through  increases or decreases in the value of the company's  shares as
traded in the public trading market for such shares. Equity securities generally
take the  form of  common  stock  or  preferred  stock.  Preferred  stockholders
typically  receive  greater  dividends  but may receive less  appreciation  than
common  stockholders  and  may  have  greater  voting  rights  as  well.  Equity
securities may also include convertible securities.

DEBT  SECURITIES A debt security  typically has a fixed payment  schedule  which
obligates  the issuer to pay  interest to the lender and to return the  lender's
money  over a certain  period of time.  A company  typically  meets its  payment
obligations  associated with its outstanding debt securities  before it declares
and pays any  dividends  to  holders  of its equity  securities.  Bonds,  notes,
debentures  and  commercial  paper differ in the length of the issuer's  payment
schedule,  with bonds  carrying the longest  repayment  schedule and  commercial
paper the shortest.

The market value of debt securities  generally  varies in response to changes in
interest  rates and the financial  condition of each issuer.  During  periods of
declining  interest  rates,  the value of debt securities  generally  increases.
Conversely,  during  periods  of  rising  interest  rates,  the  value  of these
securities  generally declines.  These changes in market value will be reflected
in the fund's net asset value.

Independent   rating   organizations  rate  debt  securities  based  upon  their
assessment of the financial soundness of the issuer.  Generally,  a lower rating
indicates  higher risk. The fund may buy debt securities  which are rated Baa by
Moody's  Investors  Service,   Inc.  (Moody's)  or  BBB  by  Standard  &  Poor's
Corporation  (S&P) or  better;  or  unrated  debt  that is  determined  to be of
comparable quality. At present,  the fund does not intend to invest more than 5%
of its total assets in non-investment  grade securities (rated lower than Baa by
Moody's or BBB by S&P).

FOREIGN  SECURITIES The fund may buy securities of foreign  issuers  directly in
foreign  markets so long as, in the manager's  judgment,  an established  public
trading  market exists (that is, there are a sufficient  number of shares traded
regularly  relative  to the  number  of  shares to be  purchased  by the  fund).
Securities acquired by the fund outside the U.S. that are publicly traded in the
U.S. or on a foreign  securities  exchange or in a foreign securities market are
not  considered  by the fund to be illiquid  assets so long as the fund buys and
holds the  securities  with the  intention of reselling  the  securities  in the
foreign trading market,  the fund reasonably  believes it can readily dispose of
the  securities  for cash in the U.S.  or foreign  market,  and  current  market
quotations  are readily  available.  The fund will not buy securities of foreign
issuers  outside  of  the  U.S.  under  circumstances  where,  at  the  time  of
acquisition,  the fund has  reason  to  believe  that it could  not  resell  the
securities  in a public  trading  market.  Investments  may be in  securities of
foreign  issuers,  whether  located in developed or undeveloped  countries,  but
investments will not be made in any securities issued without stock certificates
or  comparable  stock  documents.  The fund  does not  presently  intend  to buy
securities of issuers in developing nations.

DEPOSITARY  RECEIPTS  Many  securities  of foreign  issuers are  represented  by
American  Depositary  Receipts ("ADRs"),  European Depositary Receipts ("EDRs"),
and Global Depositary Receipts ("GDRs")  (collectively  "Depositary  Receipts").
ADRs evidence  ownership  of, and represent the right to receive,  securities of
foreign  issuers  deposited  in a  domestic  bank or trust  company or a foreign
correspondent bank. EDRs and GDRs are typically issued by foreign banks or trust
companies,  although they also may be issued by U.S.  banks or trust  companies,
and evidence ownership of underlying  securities issued by either a foreign or a
U.S. corporation. Generally, Depositary Receipts in registered form are designed
for use in the U.S. securities market and Depositary Receipts in bearer form are
designed for use in securities markets outside the U.S.

Prices of ADRs are quoted in U.S.  dollars,  and ADRs are traded in the U.S.  on
exchanges  or  over-the-counter.  While  ADRs  do not  eliminate  all  the  risk
associated with foreign  investments,  by investing in ADRs rather than directly
in the stock of foreign  issuers,  the fund will avoid currency risks during the
settlement  period for either purchases or sales. In general,  there is a large,
liquid market in the U.S. for ADRs quoted on a national  securities  exchange or
on NASDAQ.  The  information  available  for ADRs is subject to the  accounting,
auditing and  financial  reporting  standards of the U.S.  market or exchange on
which they are traded,  which  standards are more uniform and more exacting than
those  to which  many  foreign  issuers  may be  subject.  EDRs and GDRs may not
necessarily be  denominated  in the same currency as the  underlying  securities
into which they may be converted.

Depositary  Receipts may be issued under sponsored or unsponsored  programs.  In
sponsored  programs,  an issuer  has made  arrangements  to have its  securities
traded in the form of Depositary Receipts. In unsponsored  programs,  the issuer
may not be directly involved in the creation of the program. Although regulatory
requirements  with respect to sponsored and  unsponsored  programs are generally
similar, in some cases it may be easier to obtain financial  information from an
issuer  that  has   participated  in  the  creation  of  a  sponsored   program.
Accordingly,  there  may be less  information  available  regarding  issuers  of
securities  underlying  unsponsored  programs and there may not be a correlation
between this information and the market value of the Depositary Receipts.

CONVERTIBLE  SECURITIES Although the fund may invest in convertible  securities,
it does not  intend to  invest  more  than 10% of its  total  assets in such.  A
convertible  security is generally a debt obligation or preferred stock that may
be converted  within a specified  period of time into a certain amount of common
stock of the same or a  different  issuer.  A  convertible  security  provides a
fixed-income  stream and the  opportunity,  through its conversion  feature,  to
participate in the capital appreciation resulting from a market price advance in
its  underlying  common  stock.  As with a  straight  fixed-income  security,  a
convertible  security  tends to increase  in market  value when  interest  rates
decline and decrease in value when interest rates rise. Like a common stock, the
value of a  convertible  security  also tends to increase as the market value of
the underlying  stock rises, and it tends to decrease as the market value of the
underlying stock declines.  Because its value can be influenced by both interest
rate and  market  movements,  a  convertible  security  is not as  sensitive  to
interest  rates as a similar  fixed-income  security,  nor is it as sensitive to
changes in share price as its underlying stock.

A convertible security is usually issued either by an operating company or by an
investment  bank. When issued by an operating  company,  a convertible  security
tends  to be  senior  to  common  stock,  but  subordinate  to  other  types  of
fixed-income  securities  issued by that company.  When a  convertible  security
issued by an operating  company is  "converted,"  the  operating  company  often
issues new stock to the holder of the  convertible  security  but, if the parity
price of the  convertible  security is less than the call price,  the  operating
company may pay out cash instead of common stock. If the convertible security is
issued  by  an  investment  bank,  the  security  is an  obligation  of  and  is
convertible through the issuing investment bank.

The  issuer of a  convertible  security  may be  important  in  determining  the
security's true value. This is because the holder of a convertible security will
have recourse  only to the issuer.  In addition,  a convertible  security may be
subject to redemption by the issuer,  but only after a specified  date and under
circumstances established at the time the security is issued.

While the fund uses the same criteria to rate a  convertible  debt security that
it uses to rate a more conventional debt security, a convertible preferred stock
is treated like a preferred  stock for the fund's  financial  reporting,  credit
rating, and investment limitation purposes. A preferred stock is subordinated to
all debt obligations in the event of insolvency, and an issuer's failure to make
a dividend payment is generally not an event of default  entitling the preferred
shareholder to take action. A preferred stock generally has no maturity date, so
that its market value is dependent on the  issuer's  business  prospects  for an
indefinite period of time. In addition,  distributions  from preferred stock are
dividends,  rather than interest  payments,  and are usually treated as such for
corporate tax purposes.

ENHANCED  CONVERTIBLE  SECURITIES The fund may invest in  convertible  preferred
stocks that offer enhanced yield features,  such as Preferred Equity  Redemption
Cumulative Stocks ("PERCS"),  which provide an investor,  such as the fund, with
the  opportunity to earn higher dividend income than is available on a company's
common stock.  PERCS are  preferred  stocks that  generally  feature a mandatory
conversion  date,  as well as a  capital  appreciation  limit  which is  usually
expressed  in terms of a stated  price.  Most PERCS  expire three years from the
date of issue,  at which  time they are  convertible  into  common  stock of the
issuer.  PERCS are  generally  not  convertible  into cash at maturity.  Under a
typical  arrangement,  after  three years  PERCS  convert  into one share of the
issuer's  common stock if the issuer's  common stock is trading at a price below
that set by the capital appreciation limit, and into less than one full share if
the  issuer's  common  stock is trading at a price above that set by the capital
appreciation  limit.  The  amount of that  fractional  share of common  stock is
determined  by dividing the price set by the capital  appreciation  limit by the
market price of the issuer's common stock. PERCS can be called at any time prior
to maturity, and hence do not provide call protection. If called early, however,
the issuer must pay a call premium over the market price to the  investor.  This
call premium declines at a preset rate daily, up to the maturity date.

The fund may also invest in other enhanced convertible securities. These include
but are not limited to ACES (Automatically Convertible Equity Securities),  PEPS
(Participating  Equity Preferred Stock),  PRIDES (Preferred Redeemable Increased
Dividend   Equity   Securities),   SAILS  (Stock   Appreciation   Income  Linked
Securities),  TECONS (Term Convertible Notes), QICS (Quarterly Income Cumulative
Securities),  and DECS (Dividend Enhanced Convertible  Securities).  ACES, PEPS,
PRIDES, SAILS, TECONS, QICS, and DECS all have the following features:  they are
issued by the  company,  the common stock of which will be received in the event
the convertible  preferred  stock is converted;  unlike PERCS they do not have a
capital  appreciation limit; they seek to provide the investor with high current
income with some  prospect of future  capital  appreciation;  they are typically
issued with three or four-year  maturities;  they  typically  have some built-in
call  protection  for the first two to three years;  investors have the right to
convert  them into shares of common stock at a preset  conversion  ratio or hold
them until  maturity,  and upon  maturity,  they will  automatically  convert to
either cash or a specified number of shares of common stock.

Similarly,  there may be enhanced  convertible  debt  obligations  issued by the
operating  company,  whose  common  stock is to be  acquired  in the  event  the
security is converted,  or by a different  issuer,  such as an investment  bank.
These  securities  may be  identified  by  names  such  as ELKS  (Equity  Linked
Securities)  or  similar  names.  Typically  they  share  most  of  the  salient
characteristics of an enhanced convertible preferred stock but will be ranked as
senior or subordinated debt in the issuer's corporate structure according to the
terms  of the debt  indenture.  There  may be  additional  types of  convertible
securities  not  specifically  referred to herein  which may be similar to those
described  above in which  the fund may  invest,  consistent  with its goals and
policies.

An  investment  in an enhanced  convertible  security or any other  security may
involve additional risks to the fund. The fund may have difficulty  disposing of
such  securities  because  there may be a thin  trading  market for a particular
security  at any given time.  Reduced  liquidity  may have an adverse  impact on
market price and the fund's  ability to dispose of particular  securities,  when
necessary,  to meet the  fund's  liquidity  needs or in  response  to a specific
economic event, such as the deterioration in the  creditworthiness of an issuer.
Reduced  liquidity in the secondary market for certain  securities may also make
it more  difficult  for the fund to  obtain  market  quotations  based on actual
trades for purposes of valuing the fund's portfolio.  The fund, however, intends
to buy liquid  securities,  though there can be no assurances  that this will be
achieved.

REPURCHASE  AGREEMENTS  The fund  generally will have a portion of its assets in
cash or cash  equivalents  for a variety of  reasons,  including  waiting  for a
special investment opportunity or taking a defensive position. To earn income on
this portion of its assets, the fund may enter into repurchase agreements. Under
a  repurchase  agreement,  the fund agrees to buy  securities  guaranteed  as to
payment of principal and interest by the U.S.  government or its agencies from a
qualified bank or broker-dealer and then to sell the securities back to the bank
or broker-dealer after a short period of time (generally,  less than seven days)
at a higher  price.  The  bank or  broker-dealer  must  transfer  to the  fund's
custodian securities with an initial market value of at least 102% of the dollar
amount  invested by the fund in each  repurchase  agreement.  The  manager  will
monitor the value of such securities daily to determine that the value equals or
exceeds the repurchase price.

Repurchase agreements may involve risks in the event of default or insolvency of
the bank or  broker-dealer,  including  possible delays or restrictions upon the
fund's  ability  to sell the  underlying  securities.  The fund will  enter into
repurchase  agreements  only  with  parties  who meet  certain  creditworthiness
standards, i.e., banks or broker-dealers that the manager has determined present
no serious risk of becoming involved in bankruptcy  proceedings  within the time
frame contemplated by the repurchase transaction.

LOANS OF PORTFOLIO  SECURITIES To generate  additional income, the fund may lend
certain of its portfolio securities to qualified banks and broker-dealers. These
loans may not exceed 10% of the value of the fund's  total  assets,  measured at
the time of the most recent loan. For each loan, the borrower must maintain with
the  fund's  custodian  collateral  (consisting  of  any  combination  of  cash,
securities issued by the U.S. government and its agencies and instrumentalities,
or  irrevocable  letters of credit)  with a value at least  equal to 100% of the
current market value of the loaned securities. The fund retains all or a portion
of the interest  received on investment of the cash collateral or receives a fee
from the borrower.  The fund also continues to receive any distributions paid on
the loaned securities.  The fund may terminate a loan at any time and obtain the
return of the  securities  loaned  within the normal  settlement  period for the
security involved.

Where voting rights with respect to the loaned  securities pass with the lending
of the  securities,  the manager  intends to call the loaned  securities to vote
proxies,  or to use other  practicable and legally  enforceable  means to obtain
voting rights,  when the manager has knowledge that, in its opinion,  a material
event  affecting  the  loaned  securities  will occur or the  manager  otherwise
believes it necessary to vote.  As with other  extensions  of credit,  there are
risks of delay in recovery or even loss of rights in  collateral in the event of
default or insolvency of the borrower. The fund will loan its securities only to
parties who meet  creditworthiness  standards  approved  by the fund's  board of
directors, i.e., banks or broker-dealers that the manager has determined present
no serious risk of becoming involved in bankruptcy  proceedings  within the time
frame contemplated by the loan.

ILLIQUID INVESTMENTS The fund's policy is not to invest more than 10% of its net
assets in illiquid securities. Illiquid securities are generally securities that
cannot  be  sold  within  seven  days  in  the  normal  course  of  business  at
approximately the amount at which the fund has valued them.

OPTIONS, FUTURES, AND OPTIONS ON FINANCIAL FUTURES

CALL AND PUT OPTIONS The fund may write (sell)  covered put and call options and
buy put and call options on securities listed on a national  securities exchange
and in the over-the-counter  ("OTC") market.  Additionally,  the fund may "close
out" options it has entered into.

A call option gives the option holder the right to buy the  underlying  security
from the  option  writer at the option  exercise  price at any time prior to the
expiration of the option. A put option gives the option holder the right to sell
the underlying security to the option writer at the option exercise price at any
time prior to the expiration of the option.

A call option  written by the fund is "covered" if the fund owns the  underlying
security that is subject to the call or has an absolute and  immediate  right to
acquire that security without  additional cash  consideration (or for additional
cash  consideration  held in a segregated  account by its  custodian  bank) upon
conversion or exchange of other securities held in its portfolio.  A call option
is also  covered if the fund holds a call on the same  security  and in the same
principal  amount as the call written where the exercise  price of the call held
(a) is equal to or less than the  exercise  price of the call  written or (b) is
greater  than the  exercise  price  of the call  written  if the  difference  in
exercise prices is maintained by the fund in cash and high grade debt securities
in a  segregated  account  with its  custodian  bank.  The  premium  paid by the
purchaser of an option will reflect, among other things, the relationship of the
exercise price to the market price and  volatility of the  underlying  security,
the remaining term of the option, supply and demand and interest rates.

The writer of an option may have no control over when the underlying  securities
must be sold, in the case of a call option,  or purchased,  in the case of a put
option, since the writer may be assigned an exercise notice at any time prior to
the termination of the obligation. Whether or not an option expires unexercised,
the writer retains the amount of the premium.  This amount may, in the case of a
covered  call  option,  be  offset  by a  decline  in the  market  value  of the
underlying security during the option period. If a call option is exercised, the
writer experiences a profit or loss from the sale of the underlying security. If
a put option is  exercised,  the writer must fulfill the  obligation  to buy the
underlying  security at the exercise price, which will usually exceed the market
value of the underlying security at that time.

If the writer of an option wants to  terminate  its  obligation,  the writer may
effect a "closing  purchase  transaction" by buying an option of the same series
as the  option  previously  written.  The  effect  of the  purchase  is that the
clearing  corporation will cancel the writer's  position.  However, a writer may
not effect a closing purchase  transaction  after being notified of the exercise
of an option.  Likewise,  the holder of an option may  liquidate its position by
effecting a "closing sale  transaction"  by selling an option of the same series
as the option previously purchased.  There is no guarantee that either a closing
purchase or a closing  sale  transaction  may be made at the time desired by the
fund.

Effecting a closing  transaction  in the case of a written call option  allows a
fund to write  another call option on the  underlying  security with a different
exercise price,  expiration date or both. In the case of a written put option, a
closing transaction allows a fund to write another covered put option. Effecting
a closing  transaction  also  allows the cash or  proceeds  from the sale of any
securities  subject to the option to be used for other fund investments.  If the
fund wants to sell a  particular  security  from its  portfolio  on which it has
written a call option,  it will effect a closing  transaction prior to or at the
same time as the sale of the security.

The fund will  realize a profit  from a closing  transaction  if the cost of the
transaction is less than the premium received from writing the option or is more
than the premium paid to purchase the option.  The fund will realize a loss from
a closing  transaction  if the cost of the  transaction is more than the premium
received  from  writing the option or is less than the  premium  paid to buy the
option.  Because  increases in the market price of a call option will  generally
reflect  increases  in the market  price of the  underlying  security,  any loss
resulting from the closing  transaction of a written call option is likely to be
offset in whole or in part by appreciation  of the underlying  security owned by
the fund.

The fund may buy call options on  securities  that it intends to buy in order to
limit the risk of a  substantial  increase in the market  price of the  security
before  the  purchase  is  effected.  The fund may  also  buy  call  options  on
securities  held in its portfolio  and on which it has written call  options.  A
call option gives the holder the right to buy the underlying securities from the
option writer at a stated exercise price. Prior to its expiration, a call option
may be sold in a closing sale transaction.  Profit or loss from such a sale will
depend on whether the amount  received is more or less than the premium paid for
the call option (including transaction costs).

A put option gives the purchaser of the option the right to sell, and the writer
the obligation to buy, the underlying  security at the exercise price during the
option  period.  The option may be exercised  at any time before its  expiration
date. 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 (sell) put options only on a covered basis,  which means that
the fund maintains in a segregated account cash, U.S.  government  securities or
other liquid, high-grade debt securities in an amount not less than the exercise
price at all  times  while  the put  option is  outstanding.  (The  rules of the
clearing  corporation  currently require that such assets be deposited in escrow
to secure payment of the exercise  price.) The fund may generally  write covered
put  options in  circumstances  where the  manager  wants to buy the  underlying
security for the fund's portfolio at a price lower than the current market price
of the security.  In such event,  the fund may write a put option at an exercise
price that,  reduced by the premium  received on the option,  reflects the lower
price it is willing to pay.  Since the fund may also  receive  interest  on debt
securities or currencies  maintained to cover the exercise  price of the option,
this technique  could be used to enhance current return during periods of market
uncertainty.  The  risk in this  transaction  is that  the  market  price of the
underlying  security  would decline  below the exercise  price less the premiums
received.

The fund may buy put  options.  As the holder of a put option,  the fund has the
right to sell the  underlying  security at the exercise price at any time during
the  option  period.  The fund may enter into  closing  sale  transactions  with
respect to such options, exercise them or permit them to expire.

The fund may buy a put option on an  underlying  security ("a  protective  put")
owned  by the  fund as a  hedging  technique  in order  to  protect  against  an
anticipated  decline  in the value of the  security.  Such hedge  protection  is
provided  only during the life of the put option when the fund, as the holder of
the put option,  is able to sell the  underlying  security  at the put  exercise
price,  regardless of any decline in the underlying  security's  market price or
currency's  exchange value. For example,  a put option may be purchased in order
to protect  unrealized  appreciation  of a security  when the  manager  finds it
desirable to continue to hold the security  because of tax  considerations.  The
premium  paid for the put  option and any  transaction  costs  would  reduce any
short-term capital gain that may be available for distribution when the security
is eventually sold.

The  fund  may also buy put  options  at a time  when the fund  does not own the
underlying security. If the fund buys a security it does not own, the fund seeks
to benefit from a decline in the market price of the underlying security. If the
put option is not sold when it has remaining  value,  and if the market price of
the  underlying  security  remains  equal to or greater than the exercise  price
during the life of the put option,  the fund will lose its entire  investment in
the put option. In order for the purchase of a put option to be profitable,  the
market price of the  underlying  security  must decline  sufficiently  below the
exercise price to cover the premium and transaction costs, unless the put option
is sold in a closing sale transaction.

OVER-THE-COUNTER ("OTC") OPTIONS The fund may write covered put and call options
and buy put and call  options  that trade in the OTC  market to the same  extent
that it may engage in exchange traded options.  OTC options differ from exchange
traded options in certain material respects.

OTC  options  are  arranged  directly  with  dealers  and  not  with a  clearing
corporation.  Thus, there is a risk of  non-performance  by the dealer.  Because
there is no exchange, pricing is typically done based on information from market
makers.  OTC options are available for a greater  variety of securities and in a
wider range of  expiration  dates and exercise  prices,  however,  than exchange
traded options and the writer of an OTC option is paid the premium in advance by
the dealer.

There can be no assurance that a continuous  liquid  secondary market will exist
for any  particular  OTC option at any  specific  time.  The fund may be able to
realize the value of an OTC option it has  purchased  only by  exercising  it or
entering  into a closing  sale  transaction  with the dealer that issued it. The
fund may suffer a loss if it is not able to exercise  or sell its  position on a
timely  basis.  When the fund writes an OTC option,  it generally  can close out
that option prior to its  expiration  only by entering  into a closing  purchase
transaction with the dealer with which the fund originally wrote the option.

The fund  understands  the  current  position of the staff of the SEC to be that
purchased OTC options are illiquid  securities and that the assets used to cover
the sale of an OTC  option are  considered  illiquid.  The fund and the  manager
disagree  with this  position.  Nevertheless,  pending  a change in the  staff's
position,  the fund will treat OTC options and "cover"  assets as subject to the
fund's limitation on illiquid securities.

OPTIONS  ON STOCK  INDICES  The fund may also buy call and put  options on stock
indices  in order to hedge  against  the risk of market or  industry-wide  stock
price fluctuations. Call and put options on stock indices are similar to options
on  securities  except  that,  rather  than the right to buy or sell  stock at a
specified price,  options on a stock index give the holder the right to receive,
upon  exercise  of the  option,  an amount of cash if the  closing  level of the
underlying  stock  index is  greater  (or  less,  in the case of puts)  than the
exercise  price of the option.  This  amount of cash is equal to the  difference
between  the  closing  price of the index and the  exercise  price of the option
expressed  in dollars  multiplied  by a specified  number.  Thus,  unlike  stock
options,  all  settlements  are in cash,  and gain or loss  depends on the price
movements  of the  underlying  index  rather  than  the  price  movements  of an
individual stock.

When the fund  writes an  option on a stock  index,  the fund will  establish  a
segregated account containing cash or high quality fixed-income  securities with
its  custodian  bank in an  amount  at least  equal to the  market  value of the
underlying  stock index.  The fund will maintain the account while the option is
open or it will otherwise cover the transaction.

FUTURES  CONTRACTS  The fund may enter  into  contracts  to buy or sell  futures
contracts based upon financial indices ("financial futures").  Financial futures
contracts are commodity contracts that obligate the long or short holder to take
or make delivery of a specified  quantity of a financial  instrument,  such as a
security,  or the cash value of a  securities  index  during a specified  future
period  at  a  specified  price.  A  "sale"  of a  futures  contract  means  the
acquisition of a contractual  obligation to deliver the securities called for by
the contract at a specified price on a specified date. A "purchase" of a futures
contract  means the  acquisition  of a  contractual  obligation  to acquire  the
securities  called for by the contract at a specified price on a specified date.
Futures  contracts  have been  designed by exchanges  that have been  designated
"contracts  markets" by the Commodity  Futures  Trading  Commission  and must be
executed  through a futures  commission  merchant,  or brokerage firm, that is a
member of the relevant contract market.

At the same time a futures contract is purchased or sold, the fund must allocate
cash or securities as a deposit payment ("initial  deposit").  Daily thereafter,
the  futures  contract is valued and the  payment of  "variation  margin" may be
required since each day the fund would provide or receive cash that reflects any
decline or increase in the contract's value.

Although financial futures contracts by their terms call for the actual delivery
or acquisition of securities,  or the cash value of the index, in most cases the
contractual  obligation  is fulfilled  before the date of the  contract  without
having to make or take delivery of the  securities or cash.  The offsetting of a
contractual  obligation is accomplished  by buying (or selling,  as the case may
be) on a commodities  exchange an identical  financial  futures contract calling
for delivery in the same month.  This  transaction,  which is effected through a
member of an exchange,  cancels the  obligation  to make or take delivery of the
securities  or cash.  Since all  transactions  in the  futures  market are made,
offset or  fulfilled  through a  clearinghouse  associated  with the exchange on
which the contracts are traded,  the fund will incur brokerage fees when it buys
or sells financial futures.

The fund will not engage in transactions in futures contracts or related options
for  speculation  but only as a hedge  against  changes  resulting  from  market
conditions in the values of its securities or securities that it intends to buy.
The fund will not enter into any stock index or  financial  futures  contract or
related  option if,  immediately  thereafter,  more than one-third of the fund's
total assets would be represented by futures  contracts or related  options.  In
addition,  the fund may not buy or sell futures contracts or buy or sell related
options, if immediately thereafter, the sum of the amount of initial deposits on
its existing financial futures and premiums paid on options on financial futures
contracts  would exceed 5% of the market value of the fund's total assets.  When
the  fund  buys  futures  contracts  or  related  call  options,   money  market
instruments  equal to the market value of the futures contract or related option
will  be  deposited  in  a  segregated   account  with  the  custodian  bank  to
collateralize such long positions.

The purpose of the  acquisition  or sale of a futures  contract is to attempt to
protect the fund from  fluctuations  in price of  portfolio  securities  without
actually buying or selling the underlying security.

To the extent the fund enters into a futures contract, it will maintain with its
custodian  bank,  to the extent  required  by the rules of the SEC,  assets in a
segregated  account to cover its obligations with respect to such contract.  The
segregated  account will consist of cash, cash  equivalents or high quality debt
securities  from its portfolio in an amount equal to the difference  between the
fluctuating market value of such futures contract and the aggregate value of the
initial and  variation  margin  payments  made by the fund with  respect to such
futures contracts.

STOCK AND BOND INDEX FUTURES AND
OPTIONS ON THESE FUTURES

The fund may buy and sell stock  index  futures  contracts  and options on stock
index futures contracts.

STOCK  INDEX  FUTURES A stock index  futures  contract  obligates  the seller to
deliver  (and the buyer to take) an amount of cash  equal to a  specific  dollar
amount times the  difference  between the value of a specific stock index at the
close  of the last  trading  day of the  contract  and the  price  at which  the
agreement is made. No physical delivery of the underlying stocks in the index is
made.

The fund may sell stock index futures  contracts in  anticipation of or during a
market  decline to attempt to offset the  decrease in market value of its equity
securities that might otherwise  result.  When the fund is not fully invested in
stocks and  anticipates a  significant  market  advance,  it may buy stock index
futures  in order to gain rapid  market  exposure  that may in part or  entirely
offset increases in the cost of common stocks that it intends to buy.

OPTIONS ON STOCK INDEX FUTURES The fund may buy and sell call and put options on
stock index futures to hedge against risks of marketside  price  movements.  The
need to hedge against  these risks will depend on the extent of  diversification
of the fund's common stock portfolio and the sensitivity of such  investments to
factors influencing the stock market as a whole.

Call and put options on stock index futures are similar to options on securities
except  that,  rather than the right to buy or sell stock at a specified  price,
options on stock index futures give the holder the right to receive  cash.  Upon
exercise of the option,  the  delivery of the futures  position by the writer of
the option to the holder of the option  will be  accompanied  by delivery of the
accumulated  balance in the writer's futures margin account which represents the
amount by which the market price of the futures contract, at exercise,  exceeds,
in the case of a call, or is less than, in the case of a put, the exercise price
of the option on the futures  contract.  If an option is  exercised  on the last
trading day before the expiration  date of the option,  the  settlement  will be
made entirely in cash equal to the difference  between the exercise price of the
option and the closing price of the futures contract on the expiration date.

BOND  INDEX  FUTURES  AND  RELATED  OPTIONS  The fund  may buy and sell  futures
contracts  based on an index of debt  securities  and  options  on such  futures
contracts  to the  extent  they  currently  exist  and,  in the  future,  may be
developed.   The  fund  reserves  the  right  to  conduct  futures  and  options
transactions  based on an index that may be developed in the future to correlate
with  price  movements  in certain  categories  of debt  securities.  The fund's
investment  strategy in employing  futures  contracts  based on an index of debt
securities  will be  similar  to  that  used by it in  other  financial  futures
transactions.

The fund may also buy and write put and call  options on bond index  futures and
enter into closing transactions with respect to such options.

FUTURE  DEVELOPMENTS The fund may take advantage of opportunities in the area of
options and futures contracts and any other derivative  investments that are not
presently  contemplated for use by the fund or that are not currently  available
but may be developed,  to the extent such opportunities are both consistent with
the fund's investment goals and legally permissible for the fund.

Options,  futures,  and options on futures are generally  considered  derivative
securities.  The fund's  investments in these derivative  securities will be for
portfolio hedging purposes in an effort to stabilize principal fluctuations. The
fund is not  obligated  to hedge its  investment  positions,  but may do so when
deemed prudent and consistent with the fund's goals and policies.

RISKS
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

FOREIGN  SECURITIES You should consider carefully the substantial risks involved
in  securities  of  companies of foreign  nations,  which are in addition to the
usual risks inherent in domestic investments.

There  may be  less  publicly  available  information  about  foreign  companies
comparable  to the reports and ratings  published  about  companies  in the U.S.
Foreign companies are not generally  subject to uniform  accounting or financial
reporting  standards,  and  auditing  practices  and  requirements  may  not  be
comparable  to  those  applicable  to U.S.  companies.  A fund,  therefore,  may
encounter  difficulty in obtaining market quotations for purposes of valuing its
portfolio  and   calculating   its  net  asset  value.   Foreign   markets  have
substantially  less volume than the New York Stock  Exchange,  and securities of
some foreign  companies  are less liquid and more  volatile  than  securities of
comparable U.S.  companies.  Commission  rates in foreign  countries,  which are
generally fixed rather than subject to negotiation as in the U.S., are likely to
be higher.  In many foreign  countries there is less government  supervision and
regulation of stock exchanges, brokers, and listed companies than in the U.S.

In  addition,  many  countries  in which the fund may  invest  have  experienced
substantial,  and in some periods  extremely  high,  rates of inflation for many
years.  Inflation  and rapid  fluctuations  in inflation  rates have had and may
continue to have negative  effects on the economies  and  securities  markets of
certain  countries.  Moreover,  the economies of some  developing  countries may
differ favorably or unfavorably from the U.S. economy in such respects as growth
of gross domestic product,  rate of inflation,  currency  depreciation,  capital
reinvestment, resource self-sufficiency, and balance of payments position.

The  fund's  management  endeavors  to buy and  sell  foreign  currencies  on as
favorable a basis as  practicable.  Some price  spread on currency  exchange (to
cover  service  charges)  may be  incurred,  particularly  when the fund changes
investments  from one country to another or when  proceeds of the sale of shares
in U.S.  dollars are used for the purchase of securities  in foreign  countries.
Also,  some  countries  may adopt  policies  that  would  prevent  the fund from
transferring  cash out of the  country or  withhold  portions  of  interest  and
dividends  at the source.  There is the  possibility  of cessation of trading on
national exchanges,  expropriation,  nationalization,  or confiscatory taxation,
withholding,  and  other  foreign  taxes on  income  or other  amounts,  foreign
exchange  controls  (which may  include  suspension  of the  ability to transfer
currency  from a given  country),  default  in  foreign  government  securities,
political or social  instability,  or diplomatic  developments that could affect
investments in securities of issuers in foreign nations.

The fund may be affected either  favorably or unfavorably by fluctuations in the
relative  rates of exchange  between the  currencies  of different  nations,  by
exchange  control   regulations,   and  by  indigenous  economic  and  political
developments. Some countries in which the fund may invest may also have fixed or
managed currencies that are not free-floating against the U.S. dollar.  Further,
certain currencies may not be internationally traded.

Certain of these  currencies have experienced a steady  devaluation  relative to
the  U.S.  dollar.  Any  devaluations  in the  currencies  in which  the  fund's
portfolio  securities are denominated may have a detrimental impact on the fund.
Through the fund's flexible policy,  management  endeavors to avoid  unfavorable
consequences  and to take  advantage of  favorable  developments  in  particular
nations where, from time to time, it places the fund's investments.

The  exercise  of  this  flexible  policy  may  include  decisions  to  purchase
securities with  substantial  risk  characteristics  and other decisions such as
changing  the  emphasis on  investments  from one nation to another and from one
type of security to another.  Some of these decisions may later prove profitable
and others may not. No assurance can be given that profits,  if any, will exceed
losses.

The fund's board of directors  considers at least annually the likelihood of the
imposition by any foreign  government  of exchange  control  restrictions  which
would affect the liquidity of the fund's assets  maintained  with  custodians in
foreign countries,  as well as the degree of risk from political acts of foreign
governments  to which such assets may be exposed.  The fund's board of directors
also  considers  the degree of risk  involved  through the holding of  portfolio
securities  in domestic and foreign  securities  depositories.  However,  in the
absence of willful  misfeasance,  bad faith, or gross  negligence on the part of
the  manager,  any losses  resulting  from the  holding of the fund's  portfolio
securities in foreign  countries and/or with securities  depositories will be at
the risk of the shareholders. No assurance can be given that the fund's board of
directors'  appraisal of the risks will always be correct or that such  exchange
control restrictions or political acts of foreign governments might not occur.

EURO On January 1, 1999,  the  European  Monetary  Union (EMU)  introduced a new
single  currency,  the euro,  which  will  replace  the  national  currency  for
participating  member countries.  The transition and the elimination of currency
risk among EMU  countries  may change the economic  environment  and behavior of
investors,  particularly in European  markets.  While the  implementation of the
euro could  have a  negative  effect on the fund,  the  fund's  manager  and its
affiliated  services  providers  are taking  steps they  believe are  reasonably
designed to address the euro issue.

DERIVATIVE  SECURITIES The fund's ability to hedge  effectively all or a portion
of its securities through transactions in options on stock indexes,  stock index
futures and related  options  depends on the degree to which price  movements in
the underlying index or underlying  securities correlate with price movements in
the relevant portion of the fund's portfolio.  Inasmuch as these securities will
not  duplicate  the  components  of any  index  or  underlying  securities,  the
correlation will not be perfect.  Consequently, the fund bears the risk that the
prices of the  securities  being  hedged will not move in the same amount as the
hedging instrument. It is also possible that there may be a negative correlation
between the index or other securities  underlying the hedging instrument and the
hedged  securities  that would result in a loss on both the  securities  and the
hedging instrument.  Accordingly, successful use by the fund of options on stock
indexes,  stock index futures,  financial  futures,  and related options will be
subject to the manager's ability to predict correctly movements in the direction
of the securities  markets generally or of a particular  segment.  This requires
different  skills  and  techniques  than  predicting  changes  in the  price  of
individual stocks.

Positions in stock index options, stock index futures and related options may be
closed out only on an exchange that provides a secondary market. There can be no
assurance that a liquid  secondary  market will exist for any  particular  stock
index option or futures  contract or related option at any specific time.  Thus,
it may not be possible to close an option or futures position.  The inability to
close options or futures  positions  could have an adverse  impact on the fund's
ability to effectively hedge its securities.  The fund will enter into an option
or futures  position only if there appears to be a liquid  secondary  market for
such options or futures.

There can be no assurance that a continuous  liquid  secondary market will exist
for any particular OTC option at any specific time.  Consequently,  the fund may
be  able  to  realize  the  value  of an OTC  option  it has  purchased  only by
exercising it or entering into a closing sale  transaction  with the dealer that
issued it. Similarly, when the fund writes an OTC option, it generally can close
out that option prior to its expiration only by entering into a closing purchase
transaction  with the dealer to whom the fund originally  wrote it. If a covered
call  option  writer  cannot  effect a closing  transaction,  it cannot sell the
underlying  security  until the  option  expires  or the  option  is  exercised.
Therefore, a covered call option writer of an OTC option may not be able to sell
an underlying  security even though it might otherwise be advantageous to do so.
Likewise,  a  secured  put  writer  of an OTC  option  may be unable to sell the
securities  pledged to secure the put for other investment  purposes while it is
obligated as a put writer.  Similarly,  a buyer of such put or call option might
also find it  difficult  to  terminate  its  position  on a timely  basis in the
absence of a secondary market.

The CFTC and the  various  exchanges  have  established  limits  referred  to as
"speculative position limits" on the maximum net long or net short position that
any person may hold or control in a particular futures contract.  Trading limits
are imposed on the maximum  number of  contracts  that any person may trade on a
particular trading day. An exchange may order the liquidation of positions found
to be in  violation  of  these  limits  and it may  impose  other  sanctions  or
restrictions.  The fund does not believe that these trading and positions limits
will have an adverse impact on the fund's strategies for hedging its securities.

The ordinary  spreads  between  prices in the cash and futures  markets,  due to
differences in the nature of those markets,  are subject to distortions.  First,
all  participants  in the  futures  market are  subject to initial  deposit  and
variation margin  requirements.  Rather than meeting additional variation margin
requirements,   investors  may  close  futures  contracts   through   offsetting
transactions  that could  distort the normal  relationship  between the cash and
futures  markets.  Second,  the  liquidity  of the  futures  market  depends  on
participants entering into offsetting  transactions rather than making or taking
delivery. To the extent participants decide to make or take delivery,  liquidity
in the futures market could be reduced, thus producing  distortion.  Third, from
the point of view of speculators, the margin deposit requirements in the futures
market are less  onerous  than margin  requirements  in the  securities  market.
Therefore,  increased  participation  by  speculators  in the futures market may
cause  temporary  price  distortions.  Due to the  possibility of distortion,  a
correct  forecast of general  interest  rate trends by the manager may still not
result in a successful transaction.

Although the fund believes that use of futures  contracts will benefit the fund,
if the  manager's  judgment  about the general  direction  of interest  rates is
incorrect,  the fund's  overall  performance  would be poorer than if it had not
entered into any futures contract.  For example,  if the fund has hedged against
the possibility of an increase in interest rates that would adversely affect the
price of bonds held in its portfolio and interest  rates decrease  instead,  the
fund will lose part or all of the  benefit of the  increased  value of its bonds
that it has  hedged  because  it will  have  offsetting  losses  in its  futures
positions.  In addition, in such situations,  if the fund has insufficient cash,
it may have to sell securities from its portfolio to meet daily variation margin
requirements.  Such  sales may be,  but will not  necessarily  be, at  increased
prices which reflect the rising market.  The fund may have to sell securities at
a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so.

The fund's sale of futures  contracts  and buying put options on futures will be
solely to protect its investments  against  declines in value and, to the extent
consistent  therewith,  to accommodate  cash flows. The fund expects that in the
normal course it will buy securities upon termination of long futures  contracts
and long call options on future  contracts,  but under unusual market conditions
it  may  terminate  any  of  such  positions  without   correspondingly   buying
securities.

To the  extent  that the fund does  invest in  options  and  futures,  it may be
limited  by the  requirements  of the  Code  for  qualification  as a  regulated
investment  company  and such  investments  may reduce the portion of the fund's
dividends  that are eligible  for the  corporate  dividends-received  deduction.
These transactions are also subject to certain distributions to shareholders.

LOWER-RATED  SECURITIES  Although  they may offer  higher  yields than do higher
rated  securities,  low rated and  unrated  debt  securities  generally  involve
greater  volatility  of price and risk to principal  and income,  including  the
possibility of default by, or bankruptcy of, the issuers of the  securities.  In
addition,  the markets in which low rated and unrated debt securities are traded
are more limited than those in which higher  rated  securities  are traded.  The
existence of limited  markets for  particular  securities  may diminish a fund's
ability to sell the securities at fair value either to meet redemption  requests
or to respond  to a  specific  economic  event  such as a  deterioration  in the
creditworthiness  of the issuer.  Reduced secondary market liquidity for certain
low rated or unrated debt  securities may also make it more difficult for a fund
to obtain  accurate  market  quotations  for the  purposes of valuing the fund's
portfolio.  Market  quotations  are  generally  available  on many low  rated or
unrated securities only from a limited number of dealers and may not necessarily
represent firm bids of such dealers or prices for actual sales.

Adverse publicity and investor perceptions,  whether or not based on fundamental
analysis,  may decrease the values and  liquidity of low rated debt  securities,
especially  in a thinly  traded  market.  Analysis  of the  creditworthiness  of
issuers of low rated debt  securities  may be more  complex  than for issuers of
higher rated  securities.  The ability of a fund to achieve its investment  goal
may, to the extent of investment in low rated debt securities, be more dependent
upon  such  creditworthiness  analysis  than  would be the case if the fund were
invested in higher rated securities.

LOW RATED DEBT SECURITIES may be more  susceptible to real or perceived  adverse
economic and competitive  industry  conditions than investment grade securities.
The prices of low rated debt  securities have been found to be less sensitive to
interest  rate  changes  than higher rated  investments,  but more  sensitive to
adverse economic downturns or individual corporate developments. A projection of
an economic downturn or of a period of rising interest rates, for example, could
cause a decline  in low rated debt  securities  prices  because  the advent of a
recession  could  lessen  the  ability  of a highly  leveraged  company  to make
principal  and interest  payments on its debt  securities.  If the issuer of low
rated debt securities  defaults,  a fund may incur  additional  expenses to seek
recovery.

INVESTMENT  RESTRICTIONS  The fund has adopted  the  following  restrictions  as
fundamental  policies.  This  means  they may only be  changed  if the change is
approved  by (i) more than 50% of the fund's  outstanding  shares or (ii) 67% or
more of the fund's shares  present at a shareholder  meeting if more than 50% of
the fund's  outstanding  shares are  represented  at the meeting in person or by
proxy, whichever is less.

The fund may not:

1.  Purchase the  securities of any one issuer  (other than  obligations  of the
U.S.) if immediately  thereafter and as a result of the purchase, the fund would
(a)  have  invested  more  than  5% of the  value  of the  total  assets  in the
securities of the issuer, or (b) hold more than 10% of any or all classes of the
securities of any one issuer;

2. Make loans to other persons,  except by the purchase of bonds,  debentures or
similar  obligations  which are publicly  distributed or of a character  usually
acquired by  institutional  investors or through  loans of the fund's  portfolio
securities, or to the extent the entry into a repurchase agreement may be deemed
a loan;

3.  Borrow  money,  except  for  temporary  or  emergency  (but not  investment)
purposes,  and then only from  banks and only in an amount up to 5% of the value
of the assets;

4.  Invest  more than 25% of the fund's  assets (at the time of the most  recent
investment) in any single industry;

5. Underwrite  securities of other issuers,  or acquire securities which, at the
time of the  acquisition,  could be  disposed of publicly by the fund only after
registration under the Securities Act of 1933;

6. Invest in securities  for the purpose of exercising  management or control of
the issuer;

7. Maintain a margin  account with a securities  dealer or invest in commodities
or commodity contracts;

8. Effect short sales, unless at the time the fund owns securities equivalent in
kind and  amount  to those  sold.  The  fund  has not in the  past,  nor does it
currently intend to employ this investment technique;

9.  Invest more than 5% of the fund's  total  assets in  companies  which have a
record of less than three years continuous  operation,  including the operations
of any predecessor companies;

10. Invest directly in real estate  (although the fund may invest in real estate
investment trusts) or in the securities of other open-end investment  companies,
except:  (a) where there is no  commission  other than the  customary  brokerage
commission;  except (b) that securities of another open-end  investment  company
may be acquired pursuant to a plan of reorganization,  merger,  consolidation or
acquisition;  and (c) except to the extent the fund invests its uninvested daily
cash  balances in shares of Franklin  Money Fund and other money market funds in
the Franklin Group of Funds(R) provided i) its purchases and redemptions of such
money market fund shares may not be subject to any purchase or redemption  fees,
ii) its investments may not be subject to duplication of management fees, nor to
any  charge  related  to the  expense  of  distributing  the  fund's  shares (as
determined  under Rule 12b-1, as amended under the federal  securities laws) and
iii)  aggregate  investments  by the fund in any such money  market  fund do not
exceed  (A) the  greater  of (1) 5% of the  fund's  total net assets or (2) $2.5
million,  or (B) more than 3% of the outstanding shares of any such money market
fund; or

11.  Purchase or retain in the fund's  portfolio  any  security if any  officer,
director  or  security  holder of the  issuer  is at the same  time an  officer,
director  or  employee  of the  fund or of the  manager  and  such  person  owns
beneficially  more  than 1/2 of 1% of the  securities,  and if all such  persons
owning more than 1/2 of 1% own more than 5% of the outstanding securities of the
issuer.

The fund  presently has the  following  additional  restrictions,  which are not
fundamental and may be changed without shareholder approval.

The fund may not pledge,  mortgage or hypothecate  the fund's assets as security
for  loans,  nor to engage in joint or joint and  several  trading  accounts  in
securities  (except  with  respect to  short-term  investments  of cash  pending
investment into portfolio  securities of the type discussed in the  prospectus),
except that an order to purchase or sell may be combined  with orders from other
persons to obtain lower brokerage commissions.

The fund also may be  subject  to  investment  limitations  imposed  by  foreign
jurisdictions in which the fund sells its shares.

If a bankruptcy  or other  extraordinary  event  occurs  concerning a particular
security  the fund owns,  the fund may  receive  stock,  real  estate,  or other
investments  that the fund would not, or could not,  buy. If this  happens,  the
fund intends to sell such  investments as soon as practicable  while  maximizing
the return to shareholders.

Generally,  the  policies  and  restrictions  discussed  in this  SAI and in the
prospectus  apply when the fund makes an investment.  In most cases, the fund is
not required to sell a security because circumstances change and the security no
longer meets one or more of the fund's policies or restrictions. If a percentage
restriction or limitation is met at the time of investment,  a later increase or
decrease  in the  percentage  due to a  change  in the  value  or  liquidity  of
portfolio  securities  will not be considered a violation of the  restriction or
limitation.

OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The fund has a board of  directors.  The board is  responsible  for the  overall
management of the fund,  including general  supervision and review of the fund's
investment  activities.  The board, in turn, elects the officers of the fund who
are responsible for administering the fund's  day-to-day  operations.  The board
also  monitors  the fund to ensure  no  material  conflicts  exist  among  share
classes. While none is expected, the board will act appropriately to resolve any
material conflict that may arise.

The name,  age and address of the officers and board  members,  as well as their
affiliations, positions held with the fund, and principal occupations during the
past five years are shown below.

Frank H. Abbott, III (78)
1045 Sansome Street, San Francisco, CA 94111
DIRECTOR

President and Director, Abbott Corporation (an investment company);  director or
trustee,  as the case may be, of 27 of the investment  companies in the Franklin
Templeton  Group  of  Funds;  and  FORMERLY,  Director,  MotherLode  Gold  Mines
Consolidated  (gold  mining)  (until 1996) and  Vacu-Dry  Co. (food  processing)
(until 1996).

Harris J. Ashton (67)
191 Clapboard Ridge Road, Greenwich, CT 06830
DIRECTOR

Director,  RBC  Holdings,  Inc.  (bank  holding  company)  and Bar-S Foods (meat
packing  company);  director  or  trustee,  as the  case  may  be,  of 48 of the
investment  companies in the Franklin  Templeton  Group of Funds;  and FORMERLY,
President,  Chief  Executive  Officer and  Chairman of the Board,  General  Host
Corporation (nursery and craft centers) (until 1998).

S. Joseph Fortunato (67)
Park Avenue at Morris County, P.O. Box 1945
Morristown, NJ 07962-1945
DIRECTOR

Member of the law firm of Pitney, Hardin, Kipp & Szuch; and director or trustee,
as the case may be, of 50 of the investment  companies in the Franklin Templeton
Group of Funds.

*Charles B. Johnson (66)
777 Mariners Island Blvd., San Mateo, CA 94404
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD AND DIRECTOR

President,  Chief  Executive  Officer and Director,  Franklin  Resources,  Inc.;
Chairman of the Board and Director, Franklin Advisers, Inc., Franklin Investment
Advisory Services,  Inc. and Franklin Templeton  Distributors,  Inc.;  Director,
Franklin/Templeton  Investor  Services,  Inc. and Franklin  Templeton  Services,
Inc.;  officer  and/or  director or trustee,  as the case may be, of most of the
other  subsidiaries  of Franklin  Resources,  Inc.  and of 49 of the  investment
companies in the Franklin Templeton Group of Funds.

*Charles E. Johnson (43)
500 East Broward Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33394-3091
PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR

Senior Vice  President  and  Director,  Franklin  Resources,  Inc.;  Senior Vice
President,  Franklin  Templeton  Distributors,  Inc.;  President  and  Director,
Templeton Worldwide, Inc.; Chairman and Director,  Templeton Investment Counsel,
Inc.; Vice President,  Franklin Advisers,  Inc.; officer and/or director of some
of the other  subsidiaries  of Franklin  Resources,  Inc.;  and  officer  and/or
director or trustee,  as the case may be, of 33 of the  investment  companies in
the Franklin Templeton Group of Funds.

*Rupert H. Johnson, Jr. (59)
777 Mariners Island Blvd., San Mateo, CA 94404
VICE PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR

Executive Vice  President and Director,  Franklin  Resources,  Inc. and Franklin
Templeton  Distributors,  Inc.; President and Director,  Franklin Advisers, Inc.
and Franklin Investment Advisory Services, Inc.; Senior Vice President, Franklin
Advisory Services, LLC; Director,  Franklin/Templeton  Investor Services,  Inc.;
and officer and/or director or trustee, as the case may be, of most of the other
subsidiaries of Franklin Resources,  Inc. and of 52 of the investment  companies
in the Franklin Templeton Group of Funds.

Frank W.T. LaHaye (70)
20833 Stevens Creek Blvd., Suite 102, Cupertino, CA 95014
DIRECTOR

General  Partner,  Miller & LaHaye,  which is the General  Partner of  Peregrine
Ventures II (venture capital firm);  director or trustee, as the case may be, of
27 of the investment  companies in the Franklin  Templeton  Group of Funds;  and
FORMERLY,  Director,  Fischer Imaging  Corporation  (medical  imaging  systems),
Digital  Transmission  Systems,  Inc. (wireless  communications) and Quarterdeck
Corporation (software firm), and General Partner,  Peregrine  Associates,  which
was the General Partner of Peregrine Ventures (venture capital firm).

Gordon S. Macklin (71)
8212 Burning Tree Road, Bethesda, MD 20817
DIRECTOR

Director,  Fund American Enterprises  Holdings,  Inc. (holding company),  Martek
Biosciences Corporation,  MCI WorldCom (information services),  MedImmune,  Inc.
(biotechnology),  Spacehab,  Inc.  (aerospace  services) and Real 3D (software);
director or trustee,  as the case may be, of 48 of the  investment  companies in
the Franklin  Templeton  Group of Funds;  and  FORMERLY,  Chairman,  White River
Corporation  (financial  services)  and  Hambrecht  and Quist Group  (investment
banking), and President, National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.

*R. Martin Wiskemann (72)
777 Mariners Island Blvd., San Mateo, CA 94404
VICE PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR

Senior Vice President,  Portfolio Manager and Director, Franklin Advisers, Inc.;
Senior Vice President,  Franklin Management,  Inc.; Vice President and Director,
ILA Financial  Services,  Inc.; and officer and/or  director or trustee,  as the
case may be, of 15 of the investment  companies in the Franklin  Templeton Group
of Funds.

Harmon E. Burns (54)
777 Mariners Island Blvd., San Mateo, CA 94404
VICE PRESIDENT

Executive  Vice  President  and Director,  Franklin  Resources,  Inc.,  Franklin
Templeton  Distributors,  Inc. and Franklin Templeton Services,  Inc.; Executive
Vice President,  Franklin Advisers, Inc.; Director, Franklin Investment Advisory
Services,  Inc. and  Franklin/Templeton  Investor  Services,  Inc.;  and officer
and/or  director  or  trustee,  as the  case  may  be,  of  most  of  the  other
subsidiaries of Franklin Resources,  Inc. and of 52 of the investment  companies
in the Franklin Templeton Group of Funds.

Martin L. Flanagan (39)
777 Mariners Island Blvd., San Mateo, CA 94404
VICE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER

Senior Vice President and Chief Financial  Officer,  Franklin  Resources,  Inc.,
Franklin/Templeton  Investor Services,  Inc. and Franklin Mutual Advisers,  LLC;
Executive  Vice  President,  Chief  Financial  Officer and  Director,  Templeton
Worldwide, Inc.; Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer and Director,
Templeton Investment Counsel, Inc.; Executive Vice President and Chief Financial
Officer,  Franklin Advisers,  Inc.; Chief Financial  Officer,  Franklin Advisory
Services,  LLC and Franklin  Investment Advisory Services,  Inc.;  President and
Director,  Franklin Templeton Services, Inc.; officer and/or director of some of
the other subsidiaries of Franklin Resources,  Inc.; and officer and/or director
or  trustee,  as the  case  may be,  of 52 of the  investment  companies  in the
Franklin Templeton Group of Funds.

Deborah R. Gatzek (50)
777 Mariners Island Blvd., San Mateo, CA 94404
VICE PRESIDENT AND SECRETARY

Senior Vice President and General Counsel, Franklin Resources, Inc.; Senior Vice
President,   Franklin   Templeton   Services,   Inc.  and   Franklin   Templeton
Distributors,  Inc.;  Executive Vice President,  Franklin  Advisers,  Inc.; Vice
President,  Franklin Advisory Services,  LLC and Franklin Mutual Advisers,  LLC;
Vice  President,  Chief Legal  Officer  and Chief  Operating  Officer,  Franklin
Investment  Advisory  Services,  Inc.;  and  officer  of  53 of  the  investment
companies in the Franklin Templeton Group of Funds.

Diomedes Loo-Tam (60)
777 Mariners Island Blvd., San Mateo, CA 94404
TREASURER AND PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTING OFFICER

Senior Vice President,  Franklin Templeton Services,  Inc.; and officer of 32 of
the investment companies in the Franklin Templeton Group of Funds.

Edward V. McVey (62)
777 Mariners Island Blvd., San Mateo, CA 94404
VICE PRESIDENT

Senior  Vice   President  and  National  Sales   Manager,   Franklin   Templeton
Distributors,  Inc.;  and  officer  of 28 of  the  investment  companies  in the
Franklin Templeton Group of Funds.

*This board member is considered an "interested person" under federal
securities laws.
Note: Charles B. Johnson and Rupert H. Johnson, Jr. are brothers and the
father and uncle, respectively, of Charles E. Johnson.

The fund pays  noninterested  board members $325 per month plus $300 per meeting
attended.  Board members who serve on the audit  committee of the fund and other
funds in the Franklin  Templeton Group of Funds receive a flat fee of $2,000 per
committee meeting attended, a portion of which is allocated to the fund. Members
of a committee are not compensated for any committee  meeting held on the day of
a board  meeting.  Noninterested  board  members  also may serve as directors or
trustees of other funds in the Franklin Templeton Group of Funds and may receive
fees from these  funds for their  services.  The fees  payable to  noninterested
board  members by the fund are  subject to  reductions  resulting  from fee caps
limiting the amount of fees  payable to board  members who serve on other boards
within the Franklin  Templeton Group of Funds.  The following table provides the
total fees paid to  noninterested  board members by the fund and by the Franklin
Templeton Group of Funds.

                                                                    NUMBER OF
                                                                    BOARDS IN
                                                    TOTAL FEES     THE FRANKLIN
                                                   RECEIVED FROM    TEMPLETON
                                     TOTAL FEES    THE FRANKLIN       GROUP
                                      RECEIVED       TEMPLETON       OF FUNDS
                                      FROM THE       GROUP OF        ON WHICH
NAME                                 FUND 1 ($)     FUNDS 2 ($)    EACH SERVES 3
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Frank H. Abbott, III                   5,115          159,051           27

Harris J. Ashton                       5,730          361,157           48

S. Joseph Fortunato                    5,337          367,835           50

Frank W.T. LaHaye                      5,415          163,753           27

Gordon S. Macklin                      5,730          361,157           48

1. For the fiscal year ended June 30, 1999.
2. For the calendar year ended December 31, 1998.
3. We base the number of boards on the number of registered investment companies
in the Franklin Templeton Group of Funds. This number does not include the total
number of series or funds  within  each  investment  company for which the board
members  are  responsible.  The  Franklin  Templeton  Group of  Funds  currently
includes 54 registered investment  companies,  with approximately 157 U.S. based
funds or series.

Noninterested  board members are reimbursed for expenses  incurred in connection
with  attending  board  meetings,  paid  pro rata by each  fund in the  Franklin
Templeton Group of Funds for which they serve as director or trustee. No officer
or board member received any other compensation, including pension or retirement
benefits,  directly or  indirectly  from the fund or other funds in the Franklin
Templeton Group of Funds. Certain officers or board members who are shareholders
of Franklin  Resources,  Inc. may be deemed to receive indirect  remuneration by
virtue of their participation, if any, in the fees paid to its subsidiaries.

Board  members  historically  have  followed  a  policy  of  having  substantial
investments  in one or more of the  funds  in the  Franklin  Templeton  Group of
Funds, as is consistent with their individual financial goals. In February 1998,
this policy was  formalized  through  adoption of a requirement  that each board
member invest one-third of fees received for serving as a director or trustee of
a Templeton fund in shares of one or more Templeton  funds and one-third of fees
received  for serving as a director  or trustee of a Franklin  fund in shares of
one or more Franklin funds until the value of such investments equals or exceeds
five times the annual fees paid such board  member.  Investments  in the name of
family members or entities controlled by a board member constitute fund holdings
of such board  member for  purposes of this  policy,  and a three year  phase-in
period applies to such investment  requirements for newly elected board members.
In implementing such policy, a board member's fund holdings existing on February
27, 1998, are valued as of such date with subsequent investments valued at cost.

MANAGEMENT AND OTHER SERVICES
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MANAGER AND SERVICES PROVIDED The fund's manager is Franklin Advisers,  Inc. The
manager is a wholly owned subsidiary of Franklin Resources, Inc. (Resources),  a
publicly owned company engaged in the financial  services  industry  through its
subsidiaries.  Charles B. Johnson and Rupert H.  Johnson,  Jr. are the principal
shareholders of Resources.

The manager provides investment research and portfolio management services,  and
selects the  securities  for the fund to buy,  hold or sell.  The  manager  also
selects the brokers who execute the fund's portfolio  transactions.  The manager
provides  periodic  reports to the  board,  which  reviews  and  supervises  the
manager's  investment  activities.  To protect  the fund,  the  manager  and its
officers, directors and employees are covered by fidelity insurance.

The manager and its affiliates  manage numerous other  investment  companies and
accounts. The manager may give advice and take action with respect to any of the
other  funds it  manages,  or for its own  account,  that may differ from action
taken by the manager on behalf of the fund. Similarly, with respect to the fund,
the manager is not  obligated  to  recommend,  buy or sell,  or to refrain  from
recommending,  buying or  selling  any  security  that the  manager  and  access
persons,  as defined by applicable  federal securities laws, may buy or sell for
its or their own account or for the  accounts of any other fund.  The manager is
not obligated to refrain from investing in securities  held by the fund or other
funds it manages.  Of course,  any  transactions for the accounts of the manager
and other  access  persons  will be made in  compliance  with the fund's code of
ethics.

Under the fund's code of ethics,  employees of the Franklin  Templeton Group who
are access persons may engage in personal securities transactions subject to the
following  general  restrictions  and  procedures:  (i) the trade  must  receive
advance  clearance from a compliance  officer and must be completed by the close
of the business day following  the day clearance is granted;  (ii) copies of all
brokerage  confirmations  and statements  must be sent to a compliance  officer;
(iii) all  brokerage  accounts  must be disclosed on an annual  basis;  and (iv)
access persons  involved in preparing and making  investment  decisions must, in
addition to (i), (ii) and (iii) above,  file annual reports of their  securities
holdings  each January and inform the  compliance  officer (or other  designated
personnel) if they own a security that is being  considered  for a fund or other
client  transaction or if they are recommending a security in which they have an
ownership interest for purchase or sale by a fund or other client.

MANAGEMENT FEES The fund pays the manager a fee equal to a monthly rate of:

o    5/96 of 1% of the value of net assets up to and including $100 million; and

o    1/24 of 1% of the value of net assets  over $100  million and not over $250
     million; and

o    9/240 of 1% of the value of net assets in excess of $250 million.

The fee is computed at the close of  business on the last  business  day of each
month  according  to the terms of the  management  agreement.  Each class of the
fund's shares pays its proportionate share of the fee.

For the last three  fiscal  years  ended  June 30,  the fund paid the  following
management fees:

                                      MANAGEMENT
                                    FEES PAID ($)
- ----------------------------------------------------

1999                                  3,351,597

1998                                  2,894,330

1997                                  2,108,910

ADMINISTRATOR  AND  SERVICES  PROVIDED  Franklin  Templeton  Services,  Inc. (FT
Services) has an agreement  with the manager to provide  certain  administrative
services and  facilities  for the fund. FT Services is wholly owned by Resources
and is an affiliate of the fund's manager and principal underwriter.

The   administrative   services  FT  Services  provides  include  preparing  and
maintaining  books,  records,  and tax and  financial  reports,  and  monitoring
compliance with regulatory requirements.

ADMINISTRATION  FEES The  manager  pays FT  Services  a monthly  fee equal to an
annual rate of:

o    0.15% of the fund's average daily net assets up to $200 million;

o    0.135% of average daily net assets over $200 million up to $700 million;

o    0.10% of average daily net assets over $700 million up to $1.2 billion; and

o    0.075% of average daily net assets over $1.2 billion.

During the last three  fiscal  years ended June 30, the manager paid FT Services
the following administration fees:

                                    ADMINISTRATION
                                    FEES PAID ($)
- -----------------------------------------------------

1999                                   943,618

1998                                   814,177

1997                                   456,465

SHAREHOLDER SERVICING AND TRANSFER AGENT  Franklin/Templeton  Investor Services,
Inc. (Investor  Services) is the fund's shareholder  servicing agent and acts as
the fund's  transfer  agent and  dividend-paying  agent.  Investor  Services  is
located at 777  Mariners  Island  Blvd.,  San Mateo,  CA 94404.  Please send all
correspondence  to  Investor  Services  to  P.O.  Box  997151,   Sacramento,  CA
95899-9983.

For its services,  Investor Services receives a fixed fee per account.  The fund
also will reimburse Investor Services for certain out-of-pocket expenses,  which
may include  payments by Investor  Services to  entities,  including  affiliated
entities, that provide sub-shareholder  services,  recordkeeping and/or transfer
agency services to beneficial  owners of the fund. The amount of  reimbursements
for these services per benefit plan  participant  fund account per year will not
exceed  the per  account  fee  payable  by the  fund  to  Investor  Services  in
connection with maintaining shareholder accounts.

CUSTODIAN Bank of New York,  Mutual Funds Division,  90 Washington  Street,  New
York, NY 10286, acts as custodian of the fund's securities and other assets.

AUDITOR  PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, 333 Market Street, San Francisco, CA 94105,
is the fund's independent auditor. The auditor gives an opinion on the financial
statements  included in the fund's Annual Report to Shareholders and reviews the
fund's  registration  statement  filed  with the U.S.  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission (SEC).

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The  manager  selects  brokers  and  dealers  to execute  the  fund's  portfolio
transactions in accordance  with criteria set forth in the management  agreement
and any directions that the board may give.

When  placing a  portfolio  transaction,  the  manager  seeks to  obtain  prompt
execution of orders at the most favorable net price. For portfolio  transactions
on a securities  exchange,  the amount of commission paid is negotiated  between
the manager and the broker  executing the  transaction.  The  determination  and
evaluation of the reasonableness of the brokerage  commissions paid are based to
a large  degree on the  professional  opinions  of the persons  responsible  for
placement  and  review  of the  transactions.  These  opinions  are based on the
experience  of these  individuals  in the  securities  industry and  information
available  to  them  about  the  level  of  commissions   being  paid  by  other
institutional  investors of comparable  size. The manager will ordinarily  place
orders to buy and sell  over-the-counter  securities on a principal  rather than
agency  basis  with a  principal  market  maker  unless,  in the  opinion of the
manager,  a better price and execution  can otherwise be obtained.  Purchases of
portfolio  securities from  underwriters will include a commission or concession
paid by the issuer to the underwriter, and purchases from dealers will include a
spread between the bid and ask price.

The  manager  may pay  certain  brokers  commissions  that are higher than those
another  broker may  charge,  if the manager  determines  in good faith that the
amount paid is reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research
services  it  receives.  This may be viewed in terms of  either  the  particular
transaction or the manager's  overall  responsibilities  to client accounts over
which it exercises investment discretion.  The services that brokers may provide
to the manager include,  among others,  supplying  information  about particular
companies,  markets,  countries,  or local, regional,  national or transnational
economies,   statistical   data,   quotations  and  other   securities   pricing
information,   and  other  information  that  provides  lawful  and  appropriate
assistance   to  the   manager  in   carrying   out  its   investment   advisory
responsibilities.  These services may not always directly benefit the fund. They
must,  however,  be of  value  to  the  manager  in  carrying  out  its  overall
responsibilities to its clients.

It is not possible to place a dollar value on the special  executions  or on the
research  services the manager receives from dealers  effecting  transactions in
portfolio  securities.  The  allocation  of  transactions  in  order  to  obtain
additional  research  services allows the manager to supplement its own research
and analysis  activities and to receive the views and information of individuals
and  research  staffs of other  securities  firms.  As long as it is lawful  and
appropriate  to do so, the manager and its  affiliates may use this research and
data in their investment  advisory  capacities with other clients. If the fund's
officers are  satisfied  that the best  execution is obtained,  the sale of fund
shares,  as well as shares of other  funds in the  Franklin  Templeton  Group of
Funds,  also may be  considered a factor in the selection of  broker-dealers  to
execute the fund's portfolio transactions.

Because Franklin Templeton Distributors,  Inc. (Distributors) is a member of the
National  Association  of Securities  Dealers,  Inc.,  it may sometimes  receive
certain  fees  when  the  fund  tenders  portfolio   securities  pursuant  to  a
tender-offer  solicitation.  To recapture brokerage for the benefit of the fund,
any  portfolio  securities  tendered  by  the  fund  will  be  tendered  through
Distributors if it is legally permissible to do so. In turn, the next management
fee payable to the manager will be reduced by the amount of any fees received by
Distributors  in cash,  less any costs and expenses  incurred in connection with
the tender.

If purchases or sales of securities of the fund and one or more other investment
companies or clients  supervised  by the manager are  considered at or about the
same time,  transactions in these securities will be allocated among the several
investment  companies  and clients in a manner  deemed  equitable  to all by the
manager, taking into account the respective sizes of the funds and the amount of
securities  to be purchased or sold. In some cases this  procedure  could have a
detrimental  effect on the price or volume of the security so far as the fund is
concerned.  In other cases it is possible  that the  ability to  participate  in
volume  transactions may improve  execution and reduce  transaction costs to the
fund.

During the last three  fiscal  years ended June 30, the fund paid the  following
brokerage commissions:

                                    BROKERAGE
                                  COMMISSIONS ($)
- ----------------------------------------------------

1999                                 561,485

1998                                 386,000

1997                                 468,666

As of June 30, 1999, the fund owned securities  issued by  Salomon-Smith  Barney
Inc. and Dean Witter  Reynolds,  Inc.  valued in the aggregate at $3,040,480 and
$3,181,765  respectively.  Except as noted,  the fund did not own any securities
issued by its regular broker-dealers as of the end of the fiscal year.

DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The fund calculates dividends and capital gains the same way for each class. The
amount of any income dividends per share will differ, however,  generally due to
the difference in the  distribution and service (Rule 12b-1) fees of each class.
Distributions  are  subject  to  approval  by the  board.  The fund does not pay
"interest" or guarantee any fixed rate of return on an investment in its shares.

DISTRIBUTIONS OF NET INVESTMENT INCOME The fund receives income generally in the
form of dividends and interest on its  investments.  This income,  less expenses
incurred in the  operation of the fund,  constitutes  the fund's net  investment
income from which dividends may be paid to you.

DISTRIBUTIONS OF NET INVESTMENT INCOME The fund receives income generally in the
form of dividends and interest on its  investments.  This income,  less expenses
incurred in the  operation of the fund,  constitutes  the fund's net  investment
income from which  dividends may be paid to you. Any  distributions  by the fund
from such  income will be taxable to you as  ordinary  income,  whether you take
them in cash or in additional shares.

DISTRIBUTIONS  OF CAPITAL GAINS The fund may derive  capital gains and losses in
connection  with  sales  or  other  dispositions  of its  portfolio  securities.
Distributions  from net  short-term  capital  gains  will be  taxable  to you as
ordinary income.  Distributions from net long-term capital gains will be taxable
to you as  long-term  capital  gain,  regardless  of how long you have held your
shares in the fund. Any net capital gains realized by the fund generally will be
distributed  once  each  year,  and  may  be  distributed  more  frequently,  if
necessary, in order to reduce or eliminate excise or income taxes on the fund.

EFFECT OF FOREIGN  INVESTMENTS  ON  DISTRIBUTIONS  Most foreign  exchange  gains
realized on the sale of debt  securities  are treated as ordinary  income by the
fund.  Similarly,  foreign  exchange  losses realized by the fund on the sale of
debt  securities  are generally  treated as ordinary  losses by the fund.  These
gains when  distributed  will be taxable to you as ordinary  dividends,  and any
losses  will  reduce  the  fund's  ordinary  income   otherwise   available  for
distribution to you. This treatment could increase or reduce the fund's ordinary
income  distributions to you, and may cause some or all of the fund's previously
distributed income to be classified as a return of capital.

INFORMATION  ON THE TAX CHARACTER OF  DISTRIBUTIONS  The fund will inform you of
the amount of your ordinary income dividends and capital gains  distributions at
the time they are paid,  and will  advise you of their tax  status  for  federal
income tax purposes  shortly after the close of each calendar  year. If you have
not held fund shares for a full year,  the fund may designate and  distribute to
you, as ordinary  income or capital  gain,  a  percentage  of income that is not
equal to the  actual  amount of such  income  earned  during  the period of your
investment in the fund.

ELECTION TO BE TAXED AS A REGULATED  INVESTMENT  COMPANY The fund has elected to
be treated as a regulated  investment company under Subchapter M of the Internal
Revenue Code, has qualified as such for its most recent fiscal year, and intends
to so qualify during the current fiscal year. As a regulated investment company,
the fund  generally  pays no  federal  income  tax on the  income  and  gains it
distributes   to  you.  The  board  reserves  the  right  not  to  maintain  the
qualification  of the fund as a regulated  investment  company if it  determines
such course of action to be beneficial to  shareholders.  In such case, the fund
will be subject to federal,  and possibly state,  corporate taxes on its taxable
income and gains, and  distributions  to you will be taxed as ordinary  dividend
income to the extent of the fund's earnings and profits.

EXCISE TAX DISTRIBUTION REQUIREMENTS To avoid federal excise taxes, the Internal
Revenue Code requires the fund to distribute to you by December 31 of each year,
at a minimum,  the following amounts:  98% of its taxable ordinary income earned
during the calendar  year;  98% of its capital gain net income earned during the
twelve month period  ending  October 31; and 100% of any  undistributed  amounts
from the prior  year.  The fund  intends  to  declare  and pay these  amounts in
December  (or in January  that are treated by you as received  in  December)  to
avoid these excise taxes, but can give no assurances that its distributions will
be sufficient to eliminate all taxes.

REDEMPTION OF FUND SHARES  Redemptions  and exchanges of fund shares are taxable
transactions for federal and state income tax purposes.  If you redeem your fund
shares,  or  exchange  your  fund  shares  for  shares of a  different  Franklin
Templeton  Fund,  the IRS will  require  that you  report a gain or loss on your
redemption or exchange.  If you hold your shares as a capital asset, the gain or
loss that you  realize  will be capital  gain or loss and will be  long-term  or
short-term,  generally  depending  on how long you hold  your  shares.  Any loss
incurred  on the  redemption  or  exchange of shares held for six months or less
will be  treated as a  long-term  capital  loss to the  extent of any  long-term
capital gains distributed to you by the fund on those shares.

All or a portion of any loss that you realize upon the  redemption  of your fund
shares will be  disallowed  to the extent that you buy other  shares in the fund
(through  reinvestment of dividends or otherwise) within 30 days before or after
your share  redemption.  Any loss disallowed  under these rules will be added to
your tax basis in the new shares you buy.

DEFERRAL OF BASIS If you redeem some or all of your shares in the fund, and then
reinvest the sales  proceeds in the fund or in another  Franklin  Templeton Fund
within 90 days of buying  the  original  shares,  the sales  charge  that  would
otherwise apply to your reinvestment may be reduced or eliminated.  The IRS will
require you to report gain or loss on the redemption of your original  shares in
the fund.  In doing so, all or a portion of the sales  charge  that you paid for
your  original  shares in the fund will be  excluded  from your tax basis in the
shares sold (for the purpose of  determining  gain or loss upon the sale of such
shares). The portion of the sales charge excluded will equal the amount that the
sales  charge is reduced on your  reinvestment.  Any portion of the sales charge
excluded  from your tax basis in the shares  sold will be added to the tax basis
of the shares you acquire from your reinvestment.

U.S. GOVERNMENT  OBLIGATIONS Many states grant tax-free status to dividends paid
to you from  interest  earned  on  direct  obligations  of the U.S.  government,
subject in some states to minimum  investment  requirements  that must be met by
the fund.  Investments in Government  National  Mortgage  Association or Federal
National Mortgage Association securities, bankers' acceptances, commercial paper
and repurchase  agreements  collateralized by U.S. government  securities do not
generally qualify for tax-free treatment.  The rules on exclusion of this income
are different for corporations.

DIVIDENDS-RECEIVED   DEDUCTION   FOR   CORPORATIONS   If  you  are  a  corporate
shareholder,  you should note that 38.64% of the dividends  paid by the fund for
the most recent fiscal year qualified for the dividends-received  deduction.  In
some  circumstances,  you will be allowed to deduct these  qualified  dividends,
thereby  reducing  the tax that you would  otherwise be required to pay on these
dividends. The dividends-received  deduction will be available only with respect
to  dividends  designated  by the  fund as  eligible  for  such  treatment.  All
dividends  (including the deducted portion) must be included in your alternative
minimum taxable income calculation.

INVESTMENT  IN COMPLEX  SECURITIES  The fund may  invest in complex  securities.
These  investments  may be subject to  numerous  special  and complex tax rules.
These rules could affect  whether  gains and losses  recognized  by the fund are
treated as ordinary income or capital gain, accelerate the recognition of income
to the fund and/or defer the fund's ability to recognize losses, and, in limited
cases, subject the fund to U.S. federal income tax on income from certain of its
foreign  securities.  In turn,  these  rules may  affect the  amount,  timing or
character of the income distributed to you by the fund.

ORGANIZATION, VOTING RIGHTS AND PRINCIPAL HOLDERS
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The fund is a  diversified  open-end  management  investment  company,  commonly
called a mutual fund.  The fund was  organized as a  California  corporation  on
August 30, 1984, and is registered with the SEC.

The fund currently offers four classes of shares,  Class A, Class B, Class C and
Advisor Class.  Before January 1, 1999,  Class A shares were designated  Class I
and Class C shares were  designated  Class II. The fund began  offering  Class B
shares on January 1, 1999.  The fund may offer  additional  classes of shares in
the future. The full title of each class is:

o    Franklin Equity Fund - Class A

o    Franklin Equity Fund - Class B

o    Franklin Equity Fund - Class C

o    Franklin Equity Fund - Advisor Class

Shares of each class represent  proportionate interests in the fund's assets. On
matters  that  affect the fund as a whole,  each  class has the same  voting and
other rights and preferences as any other class. On matters that affect only one
class,  only shareholders of that class may vote. Each class votes separately on
matters  affecting  only  that  class,  or  expressly  required  to be  voted on
separately by state or federal law.

The fund has cumulative voting rights.  For board member  elections,  this means
the number of votes you will have is equal to the number of shares you own times
the number of board  members to be  elected.  You may cast all of your votes for
one candidate or distribute your votes between two or more candidates.

The fund does not intend to hold annual shareholder meetings.  The fund may hold
special meetings, however, for matters requiring shareholder approval. A meeting
may be  called  by the  board to  consider  the  removal  of a board  member  if
requested  in writing by  shareholders  holding at least 10% of the  outstanding
shares. In certain  circumstances,  we are required to help you communicate with
other  shareholders  about the removal of a board member. A special meeting also
may be called by the board in its discretion.

As of August 6, 1999, the principal  shareholders of the fund,  beneficial or of
record, were:

                                                          PERCENTAGE
NAME AND ADDRESS                         SHARE CLASS         (%)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------

Kathryn L. Kellogg                         Class B           6.52%
131 Harrison Drive
Roseville, CA 95678

Dean Witter FBO Herb Moore                 Class B           7.88%
P.O. Box 250 Church Street Station
New York, NY 10008-0250

FTTC Cust for the R/O IRA of               Class B           5.47%
Alice A. Matthey
Bene Paul J. Mathey
9112 Shelly Drive
Garden Grove, CA 92841

FTTC Trust Services FBO                 Advisor Class       22.44%
Martin Wiskemann IRA
P.O. Box 5086
San Mateo, CA 94402-0086

FTTC TTEE For ValuSelect                Advisor Class       42.06%
Franklin Resources PSP
P.O. Box 2438
Rancho Cordova, CA 95741-24381

1. Franklin  Templeton  Trust Company is a California  corporation and is wholly
owned by Franklin Resources, Inc.

From time to time,  the number of fund shares held in the "street name" accounts
of various securities dealers for the benefit of their clients or in centralized
securities depositories may exceed 5% of the total shares outstanding.

As of August 9, 1999,  the  officers  and board  members,  as a group,  owned of
record and  beneficially  7.92% of the fund's Advisor Class shares and less than
1% of the outstanding shares of the fund's other classes.  The board members may
own shares in other funds in the Franklin Templeton Group of Funds.

BUYING AND SELLING SHARES
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The fund continuously  offers its shares through  securities dealers who have an
agreement  with  Franklin  Templeton  Distributors,   Inc.   (Distributors).   A
securities  dealer includes any financial  institution  that, either directly or
through affiliates, has an agreement with Distributors to handle customer orders
and accounts with the fund. This reference is for convenience  only and does not
indicate a legal conclusion of capacity.  Banks and financial  institutions that
sell shares of the fund may be  required by state law to register as  securities
dealers.

For  investors  outside the U.S.,  the offering of fund shares may be limited in
many  jurisdictions.  An  investor  who wishes to buy shares of the fund  should
determine,  or  have  a  broker-dealer   determine,   the  applicable  laws  and
regulations  of  the  relevant  jurisdiction.   Investors  are  responsible  for
compliance  with tax,  currency  exchange  or other  regulations  applicable  to
redemption and purchase  transactions  in any  jurisdiction to which they may be
subject.  Investors should consult  appropriate tax and legal advisors to obtain
information on the rules applicable to these transactions.

All checks,  drafts,  wires and other payment mediums used to buy or sell shares
of the fund must be denominated in U.S. dollars. We may, in our sole discretion,
either  (a)  reject  any order to buy or sell  shares  denominated  in any other
currency or (b) honor the  transaction  or make  adjustments to your account for
the  transaction  as of a date  and  with a  foreign  currency  exchange  factor
determined  by the drawee bank.  We may deduct any  applicable  banking  charges
imposed by the bank from your account.

When you buy shares, if you submit a check or a draft that is returned unpaid to
the fund we may impose a $10 charge against your account for each returned item.

If you buy shares  through the  reinvestment  of  dividends,  the shares will be
purchased at the net asset value  determined  on the business day  following the
dividend record date (sometimes known as the "ex-dividend date"). The processing
date for the  reinvestment  of dividends may vary and does not affect the amount
or value of the shares acquired.

INITIAL SALES CHARGES The maximum  initial sales charge is 5.75% for Class A and
1% for Class C. There is no initial sales charge for Class B.

The initial  sales  charge for Class A shares may be reduced  for certain  large
purchases,  as described  in the  prospectus.  We offer  several ways for you to
combine your purchases in the Franklin  Templeton Funds to take advantage of the
lower sales charges for large  purchases.  The Franklin  Templeton Funds include
the U.S.  registered  mutual  funds in the  Franklin  Group of Funds(R)  and the
Templeton Group of Funds except Franklin  Templeton  Variable Insurance Products
Trust, Templeton Capital Accumulator Fund, Inc., and Templeton Variable Products
Series Fund.

CUMULATIVE  QUANTITY  DISCOUNT.  For purposes of calculating the sales charge on
Class A shares,  you may combine the amount of your  current  purchase  with the
cost or current  value,  whichever  is higher,  of your  existing  shares in the
Franklin  Templeton  Funds.  You also may  combine  the  shares of your  spouse,
children  under the age of 21 or  grandchildren  under the age of 21. If you are
the sole owner of a company,  you also may add any company  accounts,  including
retirement plan accounts.  Companies with one or more  retirement  plans may add
together  the total plan assets  invested  in the  Franklin  Templeton  Funds to
determine the sales charge that applies.

LETTER OF INTENT (LOI).  You may buy Class A shares at a reduced sales charge by
completing the letter of intent section of your account application. A letter of
intent 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.  By  completing  the  letter  of intent  section  of the  application,  you
acknowledge and agree to the following:

o    You authorize Distributors to reserve 5% of your total intended purchase in
     Class A shares  registered  in your name until you fulfill  your LOI.  Your
     periodic  statements  will include the reserved  shares in the total shares
     you  own,   and  we  will  pay  or  reinvest   dividend  and  capital  gain
     distributions on the reserved shares  according to the distribution  option
     you have chosen.

o    You give  Distributors  a  security  interest  in the  reserved  shares and
     appoint Distributors as attorney-in-fact.

o    Distributors  may  sell any or all of the  reserved  shares  to  cover  any
     additional sales charge if you do not fulfill the terms of the LOI.

o    Although you may exchange  your shares,  you may not sell  reserved  shares
     until you complete the LOI or pay the higher sales charge.

After you file  your LOI with the fund,  you may buy Class A shares at the sales
charge  applicable to the amount specified in your LOI. Sales charge  reductions
based on purchases in more than one  Franklin  Templeton  Fund will be effective
only after  notification  to  Distributors  that the investment  qualifies for a
discount.  Any Class A  purchases  you made within 90 days before you filed your
LOI also may qualify for a  retroactive  reduction in the sales  charge.  If you
file your LOI with the fund before a change in the fund's sales charge,  you may
complete  the LOI at the  lower of the new sales  charge or the sales  charge in
effect when the LOI was filed.

Your holdings in the Franklin  Templeton Funds acquired more than 90 days before
you filed your LOI will be counted  towards the  completion of the LOI, but they
will not be  entitled  to a  retroactive  reduction  in the  sales  charge.  Any
redemptions  you make during the 13 month period,  except in the case of certain
retirement  plans,  will be  subtracted  from the  amount of the  purchases  for
purposes of determining whether the terms of the LOI have been completed.

If the terms of your LOI are met,  the  reserved  shares will be deposited to an
account in your name or delivered to you or as you direct. If the amount of your
total purchases, less redemptions, is more than the amount specified in your LOI
and is an amount that would  qualify for a further  sales  charge  reduction,  a
retroactive  price  adjustment will be made by  Distributors  and the securities
dealer through whom purchases  were made. The price  adjustment  will be made on
purchases  made within 90 days before and on those made after you filed your LOI
and will be applied  towards the purchase of  additional  shares at the offering
price  applicable  to a  single  purchase  or the  dollar  amount  of the  total
purchases.

If the amount of your total purchases, less redemptions, is less than the amount
specified in your LOI, the sales  charge will be adjusted  upward,  depending on
the actual amount purchased (less redemptions)  during the period. You will need
to send  Distributors  an amount equal to the  difference  in the actual  dollar
amount of sales  charge  paid and the  amount of sales  charge  that  would have
applied to the total  purchases if the total of the  purchases  had been made at
one time. Upon payment of this amount, the reserved shares held for your account
will be  deposited  to an  account  in your name or  delivered  to you or as you
direct.  If within 20 days after written  request the difference in sales charge
is not paid, we will redeem an appropriate  number of reserved shares to realize
the  difference.  If you  redeem  the total  amount in your  account  before you
fulfill your LOI, we will deduct the  additional  sales charge due from the sale
proceeds and forward the balance to you.

For LOIs  filed on  behalf  of  certain  retirement  plans,  the  level  and any
reduction  in  sales  charge  for  these  plans  will be based  on  actual  plan
participation  and the projected  investments  in the Franklin  Templeton  Funds
under the LOI.  These plans are not subject to the  requirement to reserve 5% of
the total  intended  purchase  or to the policy on upward  adjustments  in sales
charges  described above, or to any penalty as a result of the early termination
of a plan,  nor are these plans entitled to receive  retroactive  adjustments in
price for investments made before executing the LOI.

GROUP  PURCHASES.  If you are a member of a qualified group, you may buy Class A
shares at a reduced sales charge that applies to the group as a whole. The sales
charge is based on the  combined  dollar  value of the group  members'  existing
investments, plus the amount of the current purchase.

A qualified group is one that:

o    Was formed at least six months ago,

o    Has a purpose other than buying fund shares at a discount,

o    Has more than 10 members,

o    Can arrange for meetings between our representatives and group members,

o    Agrees to include  Franklin  Templeton  Fund sales and other  materials  in
     publications  and  mailings  to  its  members  at  reduced  or no  cost  to
     Distributors,

o    Agrees to arrange  for  payroll  deduction  or other bulk  transmission  of
     investments to the fund, and

o    Meets  other  uniform  criteria  that allow  Distributors  to achieve  cost
     savings in distributing shares.

A  qualified  group  generally  does not  include a 403(b) plan that only allows
salary deferral contributions,  although any such plan that purchased the fund's
Class A shares at a reduced  sales  charge  under the group  purchase  privilege
before February 1, 1998, may continue to do so.

WAIVERS FOR INVESTMENTS FROM CERTAIN  PAYMENTS.  Class A shares may be purchased
without an initial  sales charge or contingent  deferred  sales charge (CDSC) by
investors who reinvest within 365 days:

o    Dividend and capital gain  distributions  from any Franklin Templeton Fund.
     The  distributions  generally  must be  reinvested in the same share class.
     Certain  exceptions  apply,  however,  to Class C shareholders who chose to
     reinvest their  distributions in Class A shares of the fund before November
     17,  1997,  and to  Advisor  Class or Class Z  shareholders  of a  Franklin
     Templeton Fund who may reinvest their  distributions  in the fund's Class A
     shares. This waiver category also applies to Class B and C shares.

o    Dividend or capital gain  distributions from a real estate investment trust
     (REIT) sponsored or advised by Franklin Properties, Inc.

o    Annuity  payments  received  under  either an annuity  option or from death
     benefit  proceeds,  if the annuity contract offers as an investment  option
     the Franklin  Templeton  Variable Insurance Products Trust or the Templeton
     Variable  Products  Series  Fund.  You should  contact your tax advisor for
     information on any tax consequences that may apply.

o    Redemption  proceeds from a repurchase of shares of Franklin  Floating Rate
     Trust, if the shares were continuously held for at least 12 months.

     If you immediately placed your redemption proceeds in a Franklin Bank CD or
     a Franklin  Templeton money fund, you may reinvest them as described above.
     The  proceeds  must be  reinvested  within  365  days  from the date the CD
     matures,  including  any  rollover,  or the date you redeem your money fund
     shares.

o    Redemption proceeds from the sale of Class A shares of any of the Templeton
     Global Strategy Funds if you are a qualified investor.

     If you paid a CDSC when you  redeemed  your Class A shares from a Templeton
     Global Strategy Fund, a new CDSC will apply to your purchase of fund shares
     and the CDSC holding period will begin again. We will, however, credit your
     fund account with  additional  shares based on the CDSC you previously paid
     and the amount of the redemption proceeds that you reinvest.

     If you immediately placed your redemption  proceeds in a Franklin Templeton
     money fund, you may reinvest them as described  above. The proceeds must be
     reinvested  within 365 days from the date they are redeemed  from the money
     fund.

o    Distributions  from an existing  retirement  plan  invested in the Franklin
     Templeton Funds

WAIVERS FOR CERTAIN  INVESTORS.  Class A shares also may be purchased without an
initial  sales charge or CDSC by various  individuals  and  institutions  due to
anticipated economies in sales efforts and expenses, including:

o    Trust companies and bank trust  departments  agreeing to invest in Franklin
     Templeton  Funds over a 13 month  period at least $1 million of assets held
     in a fiduciary,  agency,  advisory,  custodial or similar capacity and over
     which  the  trust  companies  and bank  trust  departments  or  other  plan
     fiduciaries or participants,  in the case of certain retirement plans, have
     full or shared  investment  discretion.  We will  accept  orders  for these
     accounts by mail  accompanied  by a check or by telephone or other means of
     electronic  data  transfer  directly from the bank or trust  company,  with
     payment by federal  funds  received  by the close of  business  on the next
     business day following the order.

o    Any state or local government or any instrumentality, department, authority
     or agency  thereof that has  determined  the fund is a legally  permissible
     investment  and that can only buy fund shares without paying sales charges.
     Please  consult  your legal and  investment  advisors  to  determine  if an
     investment in the fund is permissible  and suitable for you and the effect,
     if any, of payments by the fund on arbitrage rebate calculations.

o    Broker-dealers,  registered  investment  advisors  or  certified  financial
     planners who have entered into an agreement with  Distributors  for clients
     participating in comprehensive fee programs

o    Qualified registered investment advisors who buy through a broker-dealer or
     service agent who has entered into an agreement with Distributors

o    Registered  securities  dealers and their affiliates,  for their investment
     accounts only

o    Current  employees of  securities  dealers and their  affiliates  and their
     family members, as allowed by the internal policies of their employer

o    Officers,  trustees,  directors  and  full-time  employees  of the Franklin
     Templeton Funds or the Franklin  Templeton Group, and their family members,
     consistent with our then-current policies

o    Any  investor  who is currently a Class Z  shareholder  of Franklin  Mutual
     Series Fund Inc. (Mutual Series),  or who is a former Mutual Series Class Z
     shareholder  who had an account in any Mutual  Series  fund on October  31,
     1996,  or who sold his or her  shares of Mutual  Series  Class Z within the
     past 365 days

o    Investment  companies  exchanging  shares or selling  assets  pursuant to a
     merger, acquisition or exchange offer

o    Accounts managed by the Franklin Templeton Group

o    Certain unit investment trusts and their holders reinvesting  distributions
     from the trusts

o    Group annuity separate accounts offered to retirement plans

o    Chilean  retirement  plans  that  meet  the  requirements  described  under
     "Retirement plans" below

In addition,  Class C shares may be purchased without an initial sales charge by
any  investor  who buys Class C shares  through an omnibus  account with Merrill
Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith, Inc. A CDSC may apply,  however,  if the shares are
sold within 18 months of purchase.

RETIREMENT  PLANS.  Retirement  plans sponsored by an employer (i) with at least
100  employees,  or (ii) with  retirement  plan assets of $1 million or more, or
(iii) that agrees to invest at least  $500,000 in the Franklin  Templeton  Funds
over a 13 month period may buy Class A shares  without an initial  sales charge.
Retirement  plans that are not qualified  retirement  plans (employer  sponsored
pension or  profit-sharing  plans that qualify under section 401 of the Internal
Revenue Code,  including  401(k),  money  purchase  pension,  profit sharing and
defined benefit plans), SIMPLEs (savings incentive match plans for employees) or
SEPs (employer  sponsored  simplified  employee pension plans  established under
section  408(k) of the Internal  Revenue Code) must also meet the group purchase
requirements described above to be able to buy Class A shares without an initial
sales charge. We may enter into a special  arrangement with a securities dealer,
based on  criteria  established  by the  fund,  to add  together  certain  small
qualified   retirement   plan   accounts  for  the  purpose  of  meeting   these
requirements.

For retirement plan accounts opened on or after May 1, 1997, a CDSC may apply if
the  retirement  plan is  transferred  out of the  Franklin  Templeton  Funds or
terminated  within 365 days of the retirement plan account's initial purchase in
the Franklin Templeton Funds.

SALES IN TAIWAN.  Under  agreements  with certain  banks in Taiwan,  Republic of
China,  the fund's shares are available to these banks' trust accounts without a
sales  charge.  The  banks  may  charge  service  fees to  their  customers  who
participate  in the  trusts.  A  portion  of these  service  fees may be paid to
Distributors  or one of its affiliates to help defray  expenses of maintaining a
service  office  in  Taiwan,  including  expenses  related  to local  literature
fulfillment and communication facilities.

The  fund's  Class A shares  may be  offered  to  investors  in  Taiwan  through
securities  advisory  firms known  locally as Securities  Investment  Consulting
Enterprises.  In conformity  with local  business  practices in Taiwan,  Class A
shares may be offered with the following schedule of sales charges:

SIZE OF PURCHASE - U.S. DOLLARS                    SALES CHARGE (%)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------

Under $30,000                                            3.0

$30,000 but less than $50,000                            2.5

$50,000 but less than $100,000                           2.0

$100,000 but less than $200,000                          1.5

$200,000 but less than $400,000                          1.0

$400,000 or more                                           0

DEALER  COMPENSATION  Securities  dealers may at times  receive the entire sales
charge. A securities  dealer who receives 90% or more of the sales charge may be
deemed an underwriter  under the  Securities Act of 1933, as amended.  Financial
institutions or their affiliated  brokers may receive an agency  transaction fee
in the  percentages  indicated  in the dealer  compensation  table in the fund's
prospectus.

Distributors  may pay the following  commissions,  out of its own resources,  to
securities  dealers who initiate and are  responsible  for  purchases of Class A
shares of $1 million or more:  1% on sales of $1  million  to $2  million,  plus
0.80% on sales  over $2  million  to $3  million,  plus  0.50% on sales  over $3
million to $50  million,  plus 0.25% on sales over $50 million to $100  million,
plus 0.15% on sales over $100 million.

These  breakpoints  are  reset  every  12  months  for  purposes  of  additional
purchases.

Distributors  or  one of  its  affiliates  may  pay  up to  1%,  out of its  own
resources,  to securities dealers who initiate and are responsible for purchases
of Class A shares by certain  retirement  plans without an initial sales charge.
These payments may be made in the form of contingent advance payments, which may
be recovered from the securities dealer or set off against other payments due to
the  dealer  if shares  are sold  within  12  months  of the  calendar  month of
purchase. Other conditions may apply. All terms and conditions may be imposed by
an agreement between Distributors,  or one of its affiliates, and the securities
dealer.

In  addition to the  payments  above,  Distributors  and/or its  affiliates  may
provide financial support to securities dealers that sell shares of the Franklin
Templeton Group of Funds. This support is based primarily on the amount of sales
of fund shares and/or total assets with the Franklin  Templeton  Group of Funds.
The amount of support may be affected  by:  total  sales;  net sales;  levels of
redemptions; the proportion of a securities dealer's sales and marketing efforts
in the Franklin Templeton Group of Funds; a securities  dealer's support of, and
participation  in,  Distributors'  marketing  programs;  a  securities  dealer's
compensation  programs for its registered  representatives;  and the extent of a
securities  dealer's marketing programs relating to the Franklin Templeton Group
of Funds.  Financial support to securities  dealers may be made by payments from
Distributors'   resources,   from   Distributors'   retention  of   underwriting
concessions and, in the case of funds that have Rule 12b-1 plans,  from payments
to Distributors  under such plans. In addition,  certain  securities dealers may
receive  brokerage  commissions  generated  by fund  portfolio  transactions  in
accordance  with the rules of the National  Association  of Securities  Dealers,
Inc.

Distributors   routinely   sponsors  due  diligence   meetings  for   registered
representatives  during which they receive updates on various Franklin Templeton
Funds  and are  afforded  the  opportunity  to speak  with  portfolio  managers.
Invitation to these meetings is not  conditioned on selling a specific number of
shares.  Those who have  shown an  interest  in the  Franklin  Templeton  Funds,
however,  are more likely to be  considered.  To the extent  permitted  by their
firm's  policies  and  procedures,   registered   representatives'  expenses  in
attending these meetings may be covered by Distributors.

CONTINGENT  DEFERRED  SALES  CHARGE  (CDSC) If you  invest $1 million or more in
Class A shares, either as a lump sum or through our cumulative quantity discount
or letter of intent programs,  a CDSC may apply on any shares you sell within 12
months of purchase. For Class C shares, a CDSC may apply if you sell your shares
within 18 months of purchase.  The CDSC is 1% of the value of the shares sold or
the net asset value at the time of purchase, whichever is less.

Certain  retirement  plan  accounts  opened  on or after May 1,  1997,  and that
qualify  to buy Class A shares  without  an  initial  sales  charge  also may be
subject to a CDSC if the  retirement  plan is  transferred  out of the  Franklin
Templeton Funds or terminated  within 365 days of the account's initial purchase
in the Franklin Templeton Funds.

For Class B shares, there is a CDSC if you sell your shares within six years, as
described  in the table  below.  The  charge is based on the value of the shares
sold or the net asset value at the time of purchase, whichever is less.

IF YOU SELL YOUR CLASS B SHARES WITHIN       THIS % IS DEDUCTED FROM
THIS MANY YEARS AFTER BUYING THEM            YOUR PROCEEDS AS A CDSC
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------

1 Year                                                  4

2 Years                                                 4

3 Years                                                 3

4 Years                                                 3

5 Years                                                 2

6 Years                                                 1

7 Years                                                 0

CDSC WAIVERS. The CDSC for any share class generally will be waived for:

o    Account fees

o    Sales of Class A shares  purchased  without  an  initial  sales  charge  by
     certain  retirement  plan accounts if (i) the account was opened before May
     1, 1997, or (ii) the  securities  dealer of record  received a payment from
     Distributors  of  0.25% or less,  or  (iii)  Distributors  did not make any
     payment in connection with the purchase,  or (iv) the securities  dealer of
     record has entered into a supplemental agreement with Distributors

o    Redemptions of Class A shares by investors who purchased $1 million or more
     without an initial sales charge if the  securities  dealer of record waived
     its commission in connection with the purchase

o    Redemptions  by the fund when an account  falls below the minimum  required
     account size

o    Redemptions following the death of the shareholder or beneficial owner

o    Redemptions through a systematic  withdrawal plan set up before February 1,
     1995

o    Redemptions  through  a  systematic  withdrawal  plan  set  up on or  after
     February 1, 1995, up to 1% monthly,  3% quarterly,  6%  semiannually or 12%
     annually of your  account's  net asset value  depending on the frequency of
     your plan

o    Redemptions by Franklin  Templeton Trust Company  employee benefit plans or
     employee benefit plans serviced by  ValuSelect(R)  (not applicable to Class
     B)

o    Distributions  from individual  retirement  accounts (IRAs) due to death or
     disability or upon periodic  distributions  based on life  expectancy  (for
     Class B, this applies to all retirement plan accounts, not only IRAs)

o    Returns  of  excess  contributions  (and  earnings,   if  applicable)  from
     retirement plan accounts

o    Participant   initiated   distributions  from  employee  benefit  plans  or
     participant  initiated  exchanges  among  investment  choices  in  employee
     benefit plans (not applicable to Class B)

EXCHANGE  PRIVILEGE  If you  request  the  exchange  of the total  value of your
account,  declared but unpaid income  dividends  and capital gain  distributions
will be  reinvested  in the fund and  exchanged  into the new fund at net  asset
value when paid. Backup withholding and information reporting may apply.

If a substantial  number of  shareholders  should,  within a short period,  sell
their fund  shares  under the  exchange  privilege,  the fund might have to sell
portfolio  securities it might  otherwise  hold and incur the  additional  costs
related to such transactions.  On the other hand,  increased use of the exchange
privilege may result in periodic large inflows of money.  If this occurs,  it is
the  fund's  general  policy  to  initially  invest  this  money in  short-term,
interest-bearing money market instruments, unless it is believed that attractive
investment  opportunities  consistent  with the  fund's  investment  goal  exist
immediately.   This  money  will  then  be   withdrawn   from  the   short-term,
interest-bearing  money market instruments and invested in portfolio  securities
in as orderly a manner as is possible when attractive  investment  opportunities
arise.

The proceeds from the sale of shares of an investment  company are generally not
available until the seventh day following the sale. The funds you are seeking to
exchange  into may delay  issuing  shares  pursuant  to an  exchange  until that
seventh day. The sale of fund shares to complete an exchange will be effected at
net asset value at the close of business on the day the request for  exchange is
received in proper form.

SYSTEMATIC  WITHDRAWAL  PLAN Our systematic  withdrawal  plan allows you to sell
your  shares  and  receive  regular  payments  from your  account  on a monthly,
quarterly,  semiannual  or annual  basis.  The value of your  account must be at
least $5,000 and the minimum payment amount for each withdrawal must be at least
$50. For retirement plans subject to mandatory  distribution  requirements,  the
$50 minimum will not apply.  There are no service  charges for  establishing  or
maintaining a systematic withdrawal plan.

Payments under the plan will be made from the redemption of an equivalent amount
of shares  in your  account,  generally  on the 25th day of the month in which a
payment is scheduled. If the 25th falls on a weekend or holiday, we will process
the  redemption  on the next  business  day.  When you sell your shares  under a
systematic withdrawal plan, it is a taxable transaction.

To avoid  paying  sales  charges  on money you plan to  withdraw  within a short
period of time, you may not want to set up a systematic  withdrawal  plan if you
plan to buy shares on a regular  basis.  Shares  sold under the plan also may be
subject to a CDSC.

Redeeming shares through a systematic  withdrawal plan may reduce or exhaust the
shares in your account if payments exceed distributions  received from the fund.
This is especially likely to occur if there is a market decline. If a withdrawal
amount  exceeds the value of your  account,  your account will be closed and the
remaining  balance  in your  account  will be sent to you.  Because  the  amount
withdrawn  under the plan may be more than your actual yield or income,  part of
the payment may be a return of your investment.

You may discontinue a systematic withdrawal plan, change the amount and schedule
of  withdrawal  payments,  or suspend one payment by  notifying us by mail or by
phone at least  seven  business  days  before the end of the month  preceding  a
scheduled  payment.  The fund may  discontinue a systematic  withdrawal  plan by
notifying  you in  writing  and  will  automatically  discontinue  a  systematic
withdrawal  plan if all  shares in your  account  are  withdrawn  or if the fund
receives notification of the shareholder's death or incapacity.

REDEMPTIONS IN KIND The fund has committed  itself to pay in cash (by check) all
requests  for  redemption  by any  shareholder  of  record,  limited  in amount,
however,  during any 90-day  period to the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of the value
of the fund's net assets at the beginning of the 90-day period.  This commitment
is irrevocable  without the prior  approval of the U.S.  Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC). In the case of redemption requests in excess of these amounts,
the board  reserves the right to make payments in whole or in part in securities
or other assets of the fund, in case of an emergency,  or if the payment of such
a redemption in cash would be  detrimental to the existing  shareholders  of the
fund. In these circumstances,  the securities distributed would be valued at the
price used to compute the fund's net assets and you may incur  brokerage fees in
converting the securities to cash. Redemptions in kind are taxable transactions.
The fund does not intend to redeem illiquid securities in kind. If this happens,
however, you may not be able to recover your investment in a timely manner.

SHARE  CERTIFICATES  We will credit your shares to your fund account.  We do not
issue share certificates  unless you specifically  request them. This eliminates
the costly problem of replacing  lost,  stolen or destroyed  certificates.  If a
certificate  is lost,  stolen  or  destroyed,  you may have to pay an  insurance
premium of up to 2% of the value of the certificate to replace it.

Any outstanding  share  certificates must be returned to the fund if you want to
sell or  exchange  those  shares  or if you  would  like to  start a  systematic
withdrawal plan. The certificates  should be properly endorsed.  You can do this
either  by  signing  the  back  of the  certificate  or by  completing  a  share
assignment  form.  For your  protection,  you may  prefer  to  complete  a share
assignment  form and to send the  certificate  and  assignment  form in separate
envelopes.

GENERAL  INFORMATION If dividend  checks are returned to the fund marked "unable
to forward" by the postal  service,  we will  consider  this a request by you to
change your dividend option to reinvest all distributions.  The proceeds will be
reinvested  in  additional  shares  at net  asset  value  until we  receive  new
instructions.

Distribution or redemption  checks sent to you do not earn interest or any other
income  during the time the checks  remain  uncashed.  Neither  the fund nor its
affiliates  will be  liable  for any loss  caused by your  failure  to cash such
checks. The fund is not responsible for tracking down uncashed checks,  unless a
check is returned as undeliverable.

In most  cases,  if mail is returned as  undeliverable  we are  required to take
certain  steps  to try to find  you  free  of  charge.  If  these  attempts  are
unsuccessful, however, we may deduct the costs of any additional efforts to find
you from your account.  These costs may include a percentage of the account when
a search company charges a percentage fee in exchange for its location services.

Sending  redemption  proceeds by wire or electronic  funds  transfer  (ACH) is a
special  service that we make  available  whenever  possible.  By offering  this
service  to you,  the fund is not bound to meet any  redemption  request in less
than the seven day period  prescribed  by law.  Neither  the fund nor its agents
shall be liable to you or any other  person if,  for any  reason,  a  redemption
request by wire or ACH is not processed as described in the prospectus.

Franklin Templeton Investor Services,  Inc. (Investor  Services) may pay certain
financial institutions that maintain omnibus accounts with the fund on behalf of
numerous beneficial owners for recordkeeping  operations  performed with respect
to such owners.  For each beneficial owner in the omnibus account,  the fund may
reimburse Investor Services an amount not to exceed the per account fee that the
fund normally pays Investor  Services.  These  financial  institutions  also may
charge a fee for their services directly to their clients.

If you buy or sell shares through your securities  dealer,  we use the net asset
value next calculated after your securities dealer receives your request,  which
is promptly  transmitted to the fund. If you sell shares through your securities
dealer, it is your dealer's  responsibility to transmit the order to the fund in
a timely fashion.  Your redemption  proceeds will not earn interest  between the
time we receive the order from your dealer and the time we receive any  required
documents. Any loss to you resulting from your dealer's failure to transmit your
redemption order to the fund in a timely fashion must be settled between you and
your securities dealer.

Certain   shareholder   servicing  agents  may  be  authorized  to  accept  your
transaction request.

For institutional accounts, there may be additional methods of buying or selling
fund shares than those described in this SAI or in the prospectus.

In the event of disputes  involving multiple claims of ownership or authority to
control your  account,  the fund has the right (but has no  obligation)  to: (a)
freeze the account and require the written  agreement  of all persons  deemed by
the fund to have a potential property interest in the account,  before executing
instructions  regarding the account;  (b) interplead  disputed funds or accounts
with a court of competent  jurisdiction;  or (c) surrender ownership of all or a
portion of the account to the IRS in response to a notice of levy.

PRICING SHARES
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

When you buy shares,  you pay the offering price.  The offering price is the net
asset value (NAV) per share plus any applicable sales charge,  calculated to two
decimal  places using  standard  rounding  criteria.  When you sell shares,  you
receive the NAV minus any applicable CDSC.

The value of a mutual fund is  determined  by deducting  the fund's  liabilities
from the  total  assets  of the  portfolio.  The net  asset  value  per share is
determined  by dividing  the net asset value of the fund by the number of shares
outstanding.

The fund  calculates  the NAV per share of each class each  business  day at the
close of trading  on the New York Stock  Exchange  (normally  1:00 p.m.  pacific
time).  The fund does not calculate the NAV on days the New York Stock  Exchange
(NYSE) is closed for trading,  which include New Year's Day,  Martin Luther King
Jr. Day,  Presidents' Day, Good Friday,  Memorial Day,  Independence  Day, Labor
Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day.

When  determining  its  NAV,  the fund  values  cash  and  receivables  at their
realizable  amounts,  and  records  interest  as accrued  and  dividends  on the
ex-dividend  date.  If market  quotations  are readily  available  for portfolio
securities  listed on a  securities  exchange or on the NASDAQ  National  Market
System,  the fund values those  securities  at the last quoted sale price of the
day or, if there is no reported sale, within the range of the most recent quoted
bid and ask prices. The fund values over-the-counter portfolio securities within
the range of the most recent quoted bid and ask prices. If portfolio  securities
trade  both in the  over-the-counter  market and on a stock  exchange,  the fund
values  them  according  to the  broadest  and  most  representative  market  as
determined by the manager.

The fund values portfolio securities  underlying actively traded call options at
their market price as determined  above.  The current market value of any option
the fund holds is its last sale price on the relevant  exchange  before the fund
values its  assets.  If there are no sales that day or if the last sale price is
outside the bid and ask prices,  the fund values options within the range of the
current  closing bid and ask prices if the fund  believes the  valuation  fairly
reflects the contract's market value.

The fund  determines the value of a foreign  security as of the close of trading
on the foreign  exchange  on which the  security is traded or as of the close of
trading on the NYSE, if that is earlier.  The value is then  converted  into its
U.S. dollar  equivalent at the foreign exchange rate in effect at noon, New York
time, on the day the value of the foreign security is determined.  If no sale is
reported at that time,  the foreign  security is valued  within the range of the
most  recent  quoted bid and ask  prices.  Occasionally  events  that affect the
values of foreign  securities  and foreign  exchange rates may occur between the
times at which  they are  determined  and the  close of the  exchange  and will,
therefore,  not be reflected in the computation of the NAV. If events materially
affecting the values of these foreign  securities occur during this period,  the
securities  will be valued in  accordance  with  procedures  established  by the
board.

Generally,  trading in corporate  bonds,  U.S.  government  securities and money
market  instruments is substantially  completed each day at various times before
the close of the NYSE. The value of these  securities  used in computing the NAV
is determined  as of such times.  Occasionally,  events  affecting the values of
these  securities  may occur between the times at which they are  determined and
the close of the NYSE that will not be reflected in the  computation of the NAV.
If events materially  affecting the values of these securities occur during this
period,  the securities will be valued at their fair value as determined in good
faith by the board.

Other securities for which market quotations are readily available are valued at
the current market price, which may be obtained from a pricing service, based on
a variety of factors  including  recent  trades,  institutional  size trading in
similar  types of  securities  (considering  yield,  risk and  maturity)  and/or
developments  related to specific issues.  Securities and other assets for which
market  prices are not readily  available are valued at fair value as determined
following  procedures approved by the board. With the approval of the board, the
fund may use a pricing service,  bank or securities dealer to perform any of the
above described functions.

THE UNDERWRITER
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Franklin  Templeton  Distributors,  Inc.  (Distributors)  acts as the  principal
underwriter in the continuous public offering of the fund's shares. Distributors
is located at 777 Mariners Island Blvd., San Mateo, CA 94404.

Distributors  pays the expenses of the  distribution  of fund shares,  including
advertising  expenses and the costs of printing sales material and  prospectuses
used to offer shares to the public.  The fund pays the expenses of preparing and
printing amendments to its registration  statements and prospectuses (other than
those   necessitated  by  the  activities  of   Distributors)   and  of  sending
prospectuses to existing shareholders.

The  table  below  shows the  aggregate  underwriting  commissions  Distributors
received  in  connection  with  the  offering  of the  fund's  shares,  the  net
underwriting discounts and commissions Distributors retained after allowances to
dealers, and the amounts Distributors received in connection with redemptions or
repurchases of shares for the last three fiscal years ended June 30:

                                                                     AMOUNT
                                                                   RECEIVED IN
                                                                   CONNECTION
                                                                      WITH
                                     TOTAL           AMOUNT        REDEMPTIONS
                                  COMMISSIONS      RETAINED BY         AND
                                    RECEIVED      DISTRIBUTORS     REPURCHASES
                                      ($)              ($)             ($)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1999                               1,131,713         135,738         53,038

1998                               1,563,121         155,711          9,399

1997                                 706,061          74,074          3,842

Distributors  may be entitled to  reimbursement  under the Rule 12b-1 plans,  as
discussed below.  Except as noted,  Distributors  received no other compensation
from the fund for acting as underwriter.

DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE (12B-1) FEES Each class has a separate  distribution or
"Rule  12b-1"  plan.  Under  each  plan,  the fund  shall  pay or may  reimburse
Distributors  or  others  for the  expenses  of  activities  that are  primarily
intended to sell shares of the class. These expenses may include,  among others,
distribution  or  service  fees paid to  securities  dealers  or others who have
executed a servicing agreement with the fund, Distributors or its affiliates;  a
prorated  portion  of  Distributors'  overhead  expenses;  and the  expenses  of
printing  prospectuses  and reports used for sales  purposes,  and preparing and
distributing sales literature and advertisements.

The  distribution  and service (12b-1) fees charged to each class are based only
on the fees attributable to that particular class.

THE CLASS A PLAN.  Payments  by the fund  under the Class A plan may not  exceed
0.25% per year of Class A's average  daily net assets,  payable  quarterly.  All
distribution  expenses over this amount will be borne by those who have incurred
them. As of June 30, 1999, there were no unreimbursed expenses under the Class A
plan.

In implementing  the Class A plan, the board has determined that the annual fees
payable  under the plan will be equal to the sum of: (i) the amount  obtained by
multiplying  0.25% by the  average  daily net assets  represented  by the fund's
Class A shares that were  acquired  by  investors  on or after May 1, 1994,  the
effective  date of the  plan  (new  assets),  and (ii) the  amount  obtained  by
multiplying  0.15% by the  average  daily net assets  represented  by the fund's
Class A shares that were acquired  before May 1, 1994 (old  assets).  These fees
will be paid to the  current  securities  dealer of record  on the  account.  In
addition, until such time as the maximum payment of 0.25% is reached on a yearly
basis, up to an additional  0.05% will be paid to  Distributors  under the plan.
The payments made to  Distributors  will be used by Distributors to defray other
marketing  expenses that have been incurred in accordance with the plan, such as
advertising.

The fee is a  Class  A  expense.  This  means  that  all  Class A  shareholders,
regardless of when they purchased their shares, will bear Rule 12b-1 expenses at
the same rate. The initial rate will be at least 0.20% (0.15% plus 0.05%) of the
average  daily net assets of Class A and, as Class A shares are sold on or after
May 1, 1994, will increase over time.  Thus, as the proportion of Class A shares
purchased on or after May 1, 1994,  increases in relation to outstanding Class A
shares, the expenses  attributable to payments under the plan also will increase
(but will not  exceed  0.25% of  average  daily net  assets).  While this is the
currently  anticipated  calculation for fees payable under the Class A plan, the
plan  permits  the board to allow the fund to pay a full  0.25% on all assets at
any time. The approval of the board would be required to change the  calculation
of the payments to be made under the Class A plan.

THE  CLASS  B AND C  PLANS.  Under  the  Class  B and C  plans,  the  fund  pays
Distributors  up to 0.75% per year of the  class's  average  daily  net  assets,
payable  monthly for Class B and quarterly for Class C, to pay  Distributors  or
others for  providing  distribution  and related  services  and bearing  certain
expenses.  All distribution expenses over this amount will be borne by those who
have  incurred  them.  The fund also may pay a servicing  fee of up to 0.25% per
year of the class's  average daily net assets,  payable  monthly for Class B and
quarterly for Class C. This fee may be used to pay securities  dealers or others
for, among other things, helping to establish and maintain customer accounts and
records,  helping with requests to buy and sell shares,  receiving and answering
correspondence,  monitoring  dividend  payments  from  the  fund  on  behalf  of
customers, and similar servicing and account maintenance activities.

The  expenses  relating  to each of the Class B and C plans also are used to pay
Distributors  for advancing  the  commission  costs to  securities  dealers with
respect  to the  initial  sale of Class B and C shares.  Further,  the  expenses
relating  to the Class B plan may be used by  Distributors  to pay  third  party
financing  entities that have provided  financing to  Distributors in connection
with advancing commission costs to securities dealers.

THE CLASS A, B AND C PLANS.  In addition to the payments  that  Distributors  or
others are  entitled  to under each plan,  each plan also  provides  that to the
extent the fund, the manager or  Distributors  or other parties on behalf of the
fund,  the manager or  Distributors  make payments that are deemed to be for the
financing  of any  activity  primarily  intended  to  result in the sale of fund
shares  within the  context of Rule 12b-1  under the  Investment  Company Act of
1940, as amended,  then such payments shall be deemed to have been made pursuant
to the plan. The terms and provisions of each plan relating to required reports,
term, and approval are consistent with Rule 12b-1.

In no event  shall  the  aggregate  asset-based  sales  charges,  which  include
payments  made  under  each  plan,  plus any  other  payments  deemed to be made
pursuant to a plan,  exceed the amount  permitted  to be paid under the rules of
the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.

To the extent fees are for distribution or marketing functions, as distinguished
from administrative servicing or agency transactions,  certain banks will not be
entitled  to  participate  in the plans as a result of  applicable  federal  law
prohibiting  certain  banks from  engaging  in the  distribution  of mutual fund
shares. These banking institutions, however, are permitted to receive fees under
the plans for administrative servicing or for agency transactions.  If you are a
customer of a bank that is prohibited from providing  these services,  you would
be  permitted  to remain a  shareholder  of the fund,  and  alternate  means for
continuing the servicing would be sought. In this event, changes in the services
provided  might  occur and you might no longer be able to avail  yourself of any
automatic  investment or other  services then being  provided by the bank. It is
not  expected  that you would  suffer any adverse  financial  consequences  as a
result of any of these changes.

Each plan has been approved in accordance with the provisions of Rule 12b-1. The
plans are renewable  annually by a vote of the board,  including a majority vote
of the board members who are not interested  persons of the fund and who have no
direct or indirect  financial  interest in the  operation of the plans,  cast in
person  at a meeting  called  for that  purpose.  It is also  required  that the
selection  and  nomination  of such board  members be done by the  noninterested
members  of the  fund's  board.  The  plans  and any  related  agreement  may be
terminated  at  any  time,  without  penalty,  by  vote  of a  majority  of  the
noninterested  board  members  on not more  than 60  days'  written  notice,  by
Distributors  on not  more  than  60  days'  written  notice,  by any  act  that
constitutes  an assignment of the  management  agreement  with the manager or by
vote of a majority of the outstanding  shares of the class.  Distributors or any
dealer or other firm also may terminate their respective distribution or service
agreement at any time upon written notice.

The plans and any related  agreements may not be amended to increase  materially
the amount to be spent for distribution  expenses without approval by a majority
of the outstanding shares of the class, and all material amendments to the plans
or any related agreements shall be approved by a vote of the noninterested board
members,  cast in person at a meeting  called  for the  purpose of voting on any
such amendment.

Distributors is required to report in writing to the board at least quarterly on
the  amounts  and  purpose of any  payment  made under the plans and any related
agreements,  as well as to furnish the board with such other  information as may
reasonably  be  requested  in  order to  enable  the  board to make an  informed
determination of whether the plans should be continued.

For the fiscal year ended June 30, 1999, Distributors' eligible expenditures for
advertising,  printing,  payments to underwriters and  broker-dealers  and other
expenses pursuant to the plans and the amounts the fund paid Distributors  under
the plans were:

                                     DISTRIBUTORS'        AMOUNT
                                        ELIGIBLE        PAID BY THE
                                      EXPENSES ($)       FUND ($)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------

Class A                               1,336,113         1,297,268

Class B                                  17,388               841

Class C                                4 67,575           419,449

PERFORMANCE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Performance quotations are subject to SEC rules. These rules require the use
of standardized performance quotations or, alternatively, that every
non-standardized performance quotation furnished by the fund be accompanied
by certain standardized performance information computed as required by the
SEC. Average annual total return quotations used by the fund are based on the
standardized methods of computing performance mandated by the SEC.
Performance figures reflect Rule 12b-1 fees from the date of the plan's
implementation. An explanation of these and other methods used by the fund to
compute or express performance follows. Regardless of the method used, past
performance does not guarantee future results, and is an indication of the
return to shareholders only for the limited historical period used.

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN Average annual total return is determined by
finding the average annual rates of return over the periods indicated below
that would equate an initial hypothetical $1,000 investment to its ending
redeemable value. The calculation assumes the maximum initial sales charge is
deducted from the initial $1,000 purchase, and income dividends and capital
gain distributions are reinvested at net asset value. The quotation assumes
the account was completely redeemed at the end of each period and the
deduction of all applicable charges and fees. If a change is made to the
sales charge structure, historical performance information will be restated
to reflect the maximum initial sales charge currently in effect.

When considering the average annual total return quotations for Class A and C
shares, you should keep in mind that the maximum initial sales charge
reflected in each quotation is a one time fee charged on all direct
purchases, which will have its greatest impact during the early stages of
your investment. This charge will affect actual performance less the longer
you retain your investment in the fund. The average annual total returns for
the indicated periods ended June 30, 1999, were:

                               1 YEAR (%)  5 YEARS (%)  10 YEARS (%)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------

Class A                            6.52        20.66        12.81

                                                            SINCE
                                                          INCEPTION
                                             1 YEAR (%)  (5/1/95) (%)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------

Class C                                        10.00        22.16

The following SEC formula was used to calculate these figures:

                                        n
                                  P(1+T)  = ERV

where:

P   =   a hypothetical initial payment of $1,000

T   =   average annual total return

n   =   number of years

ERV =   ending redeemable value of a hypothetical $1,000 payment made at the
        beginning of each period at the end of each period

CUMULATIVE  TOTAL RETURN Like  average  annual total  return,  cumulative  total
return  assumes the maximum  initial  sales charge is deducted  from the initial
$1,000 purchase,  income dividends and capital gain distributions are reinvested
at net asset  value,  the  account  was  completely  redeemed at the end of each
period and the deduction of all applicable  charges and fees.  Cumulative  total
return,  however,  is based on the actual  return for a specified  period rather
than on the average  return over the periods  indicated  above.  The  cumulative
total returns for the indicated periods ended June 30, 1999, were:

                                1 YEAR (%)  5 YEARS (%)  10 YEARS (%)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------

Class A                           6.52        155.79       233.85

                                                            SINCE
                                                          INCEPTION
                                                         (1/1/99) (%)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------

Class B                                                       8.23

                                                            SINCE
                                                          INCEPTION
                                             1 YEAR (%)  (5/1/95) (%)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------

Class C                                        10.00       130.24

VOLATILITY  Occasionally statistics may be used to show the fund's volatility or
risk.  Measures of volatility  or risk are generally  used to compare the fund's
net asset value or performance  to a market index.  One measure of volatility is
beta.  Beta  is the  volatility  of a fund  relative  to the  total  market,  as
represented by an index considered  representative of the types of securities in
which the fund invests.  A beta of more than 1.00 indicates  volatility  greater
than the market and a beta of less than 1.00 indicates  volatility less than the
market.  Another measure of volatility or risk is standard  deviation.  Standard
deviation  is used to measure  variability  of net asset  value or total  return
around an average  over a  specified  period of time.  The idea is that  greater
volatility means greater risk undertaken in achieving performance.

OTHER  PERFORMANCE  QUOTATIONS The fund also may quote the performance of shares
without a sales charge.  Sales literature and advertising may quote a cumulative
total return, average annual total return and other measures of performance with
the substitution of net asset value for the public offering price.

Sales literature  referring to the use of the fund as a potential investment for
IRAs, business retirement plans, and other  tax-advantaged  retirement plans may
quote a total return based upon compounding of dividends on which it is presumed
no federal income tax applies.

The fund may include in its advertising or sales material  information  relating
to investment  goals and performance  results of funds belonging to the Franklin
Templeton Group of Funds. Franklin Resources,  Inc. is the parent company of the
advisors and underwriter of the Franklin Templeton Group of Funds.

COMPARISONS  To help  you  better  evaluate  how an  investment  in the fund may
satisfy your investment goal,  advertisements and other materials about the fund
may  discuss  certain  measures  of fund  performance  as  reported  by  various
financial  publications.  Materials also may compare  performance (as calculated
above) to performance as reported by other investments,  indices,  and averages.
These comparisons may include, but are not limited to, the following examples:

o    Dow   Jones(R)   Composite   Average  and  its   component   averages  -  a
     price-weighted  average  of 65  stocks  that  trade on the New  York  Stock
     Exchange.  The average is a combination of the Dow Jones Industrial Average
     (30 blue-chip stocks that are generally leaders in their industry), the Dow
     Jones Transportation Average (20 transportation  stocks), and the Dow Jones
     Utilities  Average  (15  utility  stocks  involved  in  the  production  of
     electrical energy).

o    Standard  &  Poor's(R)  500  Stock  Index  or  its  component  indices  - a
     capitalization-weighted  index designed to measure performance of the broad
     domestic  economy  through  changes in the  aggregate  market  value of 500
     stocks representing all major industries.

o    The New York Stock Exchange  composite or component  indices - an unmanaged
     index of all  industrial,  utilities,  transportation,  and finance  stocks
     listed on the NYSE.

o    Wilshire  5000 Equity Index - represents  the return on the market value of
     all  common  equity  securities  for  which  daily  pricing  is  available.
     Comparisons of performance assume reinvestment of dividends.

o    Lipper  - Mutual  Fund  Performance  Analysis  and  Lipper  -  Equity  Fund
     Performance  Analysis - measure total return and average  current yield for
     the mutual fund industry and rank individual  mutual fund  performance over
     specified  time  periods,   assuming  reinvestment  of  all  distributions,
     exclusive of any applicable sales charges.

o    CDA Mutual Fund Report,  published by CDA Investment  Technologies,  Inc. -
     analyzes  price,  current yield,  risk,  total return,  and average rate of
     return (average annual  compounded growth rate) over specified time periods
     for the mutual fund industry.

o    Mutual Fund Source Book,  published by Morningstar,  Inc. - analyzes price,
     yield, risk, and total return for mutual funds.

o    Financial  publications:  The  WALL  STREET  JOURNAL,  and  BUSINESS  WEEK,
     CHANGING TIMES,  FINANCIAL WORLD,  FORBES,  FORTUNE,  and MONEY magazines -
     provide performance statistics over specified time periods.

o    Consumer  Price  Index (or Cost of  Living  Index),  published  by the U.S.
     Bureau of Labor Statistics - a statistical measure of change, over time, in
     the price of goods and services in major expenditure groups.

o    Stocks,  Bonds,  Bills, and Inflation,  published by Ibbotson  Associates -
     historical  measure of yield,  price, and total return for common and small
     company stock, long-term government bonds, Treasury bills, and inflation.

o    Savings  and Loan  Historical  Interest  Rates - as  published  in the U.S.
     Savings & Loan League Fact Book.

o    Historical  data  supplied by the research  departments  of CS First Boston
     Corporation,  the J.P. Morgan companies,  Salomon Brothers,  Merrill Lynch,
     Lehman Brothers and Bloomberg L.P.

o    Morningstar  -  information  published  by  Morningstar,   Inc.,  including
     Morningstar   proprietary   mutual  fund  ratings.   The  ratings   reflect
     Morningstar's assessment of the historical  risk-adjusted  performance of a
     fund over  specified  time  periods  relative  to other  funds  within  its
     category.

From time to time,  advertisements  or  information  for the fund may  include a
discussion of certain attributes or benefits to be derived from an investment in
the fund. The advertisements or information may include symbols,  headlines,  or
other material that highlights or summarizes the  information  discussed in more
detail in the communication.

Advertisements  or  information  also may compare the fund's  performance to the
return on  certificates  of deposit  (CDs) or other  investments.  You should be
aware,  however, that an investment in the fund involves the risk of fluctuation
of principal value, a risk generally not present in an investment in a CD issued
by a bank.  For example,  as the general level of interest rates rise, the value
of the  fund's  fixed-income  investments,  if any,  as well as the value of its
shares  that are based  upon the  value of such  portfolio  investments,  can be
expected to fall.  Conversely,  when interest rates  decrease,  the value of the
fund's  shares can be expected to  increase.  CDs are  frequently  insured by an
agency of the U.S.  government.  An investment in the fund is not insured by any
federal, state or private entity.

In  assessing  comparisons  of  performance,  you  should  keep in mind that the
composition  of the  investments  in the  reported  indices and  averages is not
identical  to the fund's  portfolio,  the indices  and  averages  are  generally
unmanaged, and the items included in the calculations of the averages may not be
identical to the formula used by the fund to calculate its figures. In addition,
there  can be no  assurance  that the fund  will  continue  its  performance  as
compared to these other averages.

MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The fund may help you  achieve  various  investment  goals such as  accumulating
money for  retirement,  saving for a down payment on a home,  college  costs and
other  long-term  goals.  The  Franklin  College  Costs  Planner may help you in
determining  how much money must be invested on a monthly basis in order to have
a projected amount available in the future to fund a child's college  education.
(Projected  college cost estimates are based upon current costs published by the
College  Board.) The Franklin  Retirement  Planning  Guide leads you through the
steps to start a retirement  savings  program.  Of course,  an investment in the
fund cannot guarantee that these goals will be met.

The fund is a member  of the  Franklin  Templeton  Group  of  Funds,  one of the
largest  mutual  fund  organizations  in the U.S.,  and may be  considered  in a
program for  diversification of assets.  Founded in 1947, Franklin is one of the
oldest  mutual  fund   organizations  and  now  services  more  than  4  million
shareholder  accounts.  In 1992,  Franklin,  a leader in  managing  fixed-income
mutual funds and an innovator in creating  domestic equity funds,  joined forces
with Templeton,  a pioneer in international  investing.  The Mutual Series team,
known for its value-driven approach to domestic equity investing, became part of
the organization four years later.  Together,  the Franklin  Templeton Group has
over $222 billion in assets under  management for more than 6 million U.S. based
mutual fund  shareholder  and other  accounts.  The Franklin  Templeton Group of
Funds offers 106 U.S. based  open-end  investment  companies to the public.  The
fund may identify itself by its NASDAQ symbol or CUSIP number.

Currently,  there are more mutual funds than there are stocks  listed on the New
York Stock Exchange.  While many of them have similar  investment  goals, no two
are exactly alike. Shares of the fund are also generally sold through securities
dealers, whose investment  representatives are experienced professionals who can
offer advice on the type of investments suitable to your unique goals and needs,
as well as the risks associated with such investments.

The  Information  Services &  Technology  division of Franklin  Resources,  Inc.
(Resources)  established  a Year 2000 Project  Team in 1996.  This team has been
making necessary  software changes to help the computer systems that service the
fund and its  shareholders to be Year 2000  compliant.  After  completing  these
modifications,  comprehensive tests are conducted in one of Resources' U.S. test
labs to verify  their  effectiveness.  Resources  continues  to seek  reasonable
assurances from all major  hardware,  software or  data-services  suppliers that
they will be Year 2000  compliant on a timely  basis.  Resources is developing a
contingency plan, including identification of those mission critical systems for
which it is practical to develop a contingency plan. However, in an operation as
complex and geographically  distributed as Resources' business, the alternatives
to use of normal systems,  especially  mission critical systems,  or supplies of
electricity or long distance voice and data lines are limited.

DESCRIPTION OF RATINGS
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

CORPORATE BOND RATINGS

MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC. (MOODY'S)

Aaa:  Bonds  rated Aaa are  judged  to be of the best  quality.  They  carry the
smallest   degree  of  investment   risk  and  are  generally   referred  to  as
"gilt-edged." Interest payments are protected by a large or exceptionally stable
margin,  and  principal  is secure.  While the various  protective  elements are
likely to change,  such changes as can be visualized are most unlikely to impair
the fundamentally strong position of such issues.

Aa: Bonds rated Aa are judged to be high quality by all standards. Together with
the Aaa group,  they comprise what are generally known as high-grade bonds. They
are rated lower than the best bonds because  margins of protection may not be as
large,  fluctuation of protective elements may be of greater amplitude, or there
may be other  elements  present that make the  long-term  risks appear  somewhat
larger.

A: Bonds rated A possess many favorable investment attributes and are considered
upper  medium-grade  obligations.  Factors  giving  security  to  principal  and
interest  are  considered  adequate,  but elements may be present that suggest a
susceptibility to impairment sometime in the future.

Baa: Bonds rated Baa are considered medium-grade  obligations.  They are neither
highly protected nor poorly secured.  Interest  payments and principal  security
appear adequate for the present but certain  protective  elements may be lacking
or may be  characteristically  unreliable  over any great length of time.  These
bonds lack outstanding investment characteristics and, in fact, have speculative
characteristics as well.

Ba:  Bonds rated Ba are judged to have  predominantly  speculative  elements and
their future cannot be considered well assured. Often the protection of interest
and  principal  payments is very  moderate and,  thereby,  not well  safeguarded
during  both  good  and bad  times  over the  future.  Uncertainty  of  position
characterizes bonds in this class.

B: Bonds rated B generally  lack  characteristics  of the desirable  investment.
Assurance of interest and principal payments or of maintenance of other terms of
the contract over any long period of time may be small.

Caa:  Bonds rated Caa are of poor  standing.  These  issues may be in default or
there may be present elements of danger with respect to principal or interest.

Ca: Bonds rated Ca represent  obligations that are speculative to a high degree.
These issues are often in default or have other marked shortcomings.

C: Bonds  rated C are the lowest  rated  class of bonds and can be  regarded  as
having extremely poor prospects of ever attaining any real investment standing.

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

STANDARD & POOR'S CORPORATION (S&P)

AAA:  This  is the  highest  rating  assigned  by S&P to a debt  obligation  and
indicates an extremely strong capacity to pay principal and interest.

AA: Bonds rated AA also qualify as high-quality  debt  obligations.  Capacity to
pay  principal  and interest is very strong and, in the  majority of  instances,
differ from AAA issues only in a small degree.

A: Bonds rated A have a strong capacity to pay principal and interest,  although
they are  somewhat  more  susceptible  to the  adverse  effects  of  changes  in
circumstances and economic conditions.

BBB:  Bonds  rated  BBB are  regarded  as  having an  adequate  capacity  to pay
principal and interest.  Whereas they normally  exhibit  protection  parameters,
adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to lead to
a weakened  capacity to pay  principal  and interest for bonds in this  category
than for bonds in the A category.

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

C: Bonds rated C are typically subordinated debt to senior debt that is assigned
an actual or implied CCC- rating.  The C rating also may reflect the filing of a
bankruptcy   petition  under  circumstances  where  debt  service  payments  are
continuing.  The C1 rating is reserved  for income bonds on which no interest is
being paid.

D: Debt rated D is in  default  and  payment of  interest  and/or  repayment  of
principal is in arrears.

Plus (+) or minus (-):  The  ratings  from "AA" to "CCC" may be  modified by the
addition  of a plus or minus  sign to show  relative  standing  within the major
rating categories.

COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS

MOODY'S

Moody's  short-term debt ratings are opinions of the ability of issuers to repay
punctually senior debt obligations.  These obligations have an original maturity
not  exceeding one year,  unless  explicitly  noted.  Moody's  commercial  paper
ratings  are  opinions  of the  ability  of issuers  to repay  punctually  their
promissory obligations not having an original maturity in excess of nine months.
Moody's  employs  the  following  designations  for  both  short-term  debt  and
commercial  paper,  all judged to be investment  grade, to indicate the relative
repayment capacity of rated issuers:

P-1 (Prime-1): Superior capacity for repayment.

P-2 (Prime-2): Strong capacity for repayment.

S&P

S&P's ratings are a current  assessment of the  likelihood of timely  payment of
debt  having an original  maturity of no more than 365 days.  Ratings are graded
into four  categories,  ranging from "A" for the highest quality  obligations to
"D" for the lowest.  Issues  within the "A"  category  are  delineated  with the
numbers 1, 2 and 3 to indicate the relative degree of safety, as follows:

A-1: This designation indicates the degree of safety regarding timely payment is
very strong. A "plus" (+) designation  indicates an even stronger  likelihood of
timely payment.

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

A-3: Issues carrying this  designation  have a satisfactory  capacity for timely
payment.  They are, however,  somewhat more vulnerable to the adverse effects of
changes in circumstances than obligations carrying the higher designations.





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