SUPPLEMENT
FREMONT INTERNATIONAL SMALL CAP FUND
Supplement dated March 12, 1998, to prospectus dated March 1, 1998
The Board of Directors and the shareholders of Fremont Mutual Funds, Inc.
have approved a new sub-advisor for the Fremont International Small Cap Fund
(the "Fund"). The new sub-advisor is Bee & Associates Incorporated ("Bee &
Associates"), located at 370 Seventeenth Street, Suite 3560, Denver, Colorado
80202.
Bee & Associates is an independent, Denver-based registered investment
advisor founded in 1989. Its principal business is providing investment
management services. It has $525 million under management for various
foundations, endowments, retirement plan sponsors, mutual funds and individuals.
Bee & Associates' investment focus is exclusively on smaller companies worldwide
(those with under U.S. $1 billion market cap) and the current average market
capitalization of the companies in its portfolios is under $300 million. Bee &
Associates' principal executive officers and directors are Bruce B. Bee,
President and Director, and Edward N. McMillan, Principal and Director.
Bee & Associates' investment philosophy is the use of a long-term,
bottom-up, value orientation toward stock selection and portfolio construction.
Bee & Associates invests in all international markets--primarily in the
developed markets, but also including (to a limited extent) emerging markets and
post-emerging markets such as Mexico and Brazil. Bee & Associates buys companies
for long-term appreciation and the portfolio turnover is typically less than
25%. This investment approach tends to make its portfolios more tax efficient
(for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1997, the portfolio turnover rate under
the Fund's current sub-advisor was 50%).
Bee & Associates assumed responsibility for the investment portfolio of
Fremont International Small Cap Fund as of March 2, 1998. The previous
sub-advisor, Acadian Asset Management, will continue to act as sub-advisor
following March 2, 1998, to assist in the orderly transfer of the investment
portfolio to Bee & Associates. The annual sub-advisory fee paid to Bee &
Associates will be 1.00% of the Fund's average annual net assets. However, until
the earlier of (1) the end of a twelve-month period starting from the effective
date of the sub-advisory agreement, or (2) the total assets of the International
Small Cap Fund reach $15 million, the Advisor will pay to Bee & Associates a fee
computed at the annual rate of 0.80% of the International Small Cap Fundaverage
value of the daily net assets under management by Bee & Associates. Fremont
Investment Advisors, Inc. also reserves day-to-day authority to increase or
decrease the amount of Fund's assets under management by Bee & Associates.
Bee & Associates' sub-advisory fees are paid by Fremont Investment
Advisors, Inc. (the "Advisor") out of its advisory fee under a new fee
structure. The new fee structure (which includes a distribution on 12b-1 fee as
described below) is made up of the following components, each based on average
annual net assets.
Advisory fee to Fremont Investment Advisors
(includes sub-advisory fee) 1.25%
Administrative fee to Fremont Investment Advisors 0.15%
12b-1 fee 0.25%
Total Operating Expenses (after waiver) 1.50%
Total Operating Expenses (prior to waiver) 1.80% 1
The Board of Directors and shareholders of the Fund have also approved the
implementation of a 12b-1 plan under which the Fund may directly compensate the
Advisor, paying for certain distribution-related expenses, including payments to
securities dealers and others (including the Underwriter) who are engaged in
promoting the sale of shares of the Fund and who may be advising investors
regarding the purchase, sale, or retention of such shares; expenses of
maintaining personnel who engage in or support distribution of shares or who
render shareholder support services; expenses of formulating and implementing
marketing and promotional activities, including direct mail promotions and mass
media advertising; expenses of preparing, printing, and distributing sales
literature, prospectuses, statements of additional information, and reports for
recipients other than existing shareholders of the Fund; expenses of obtaining
such information, analyses, and reports with respect to marketing and
promotional activities as the Advisor may, from time to time, deem advisable;
and other expenses related to the distribution of the Fund's shares.
The annual limitation for compensation to the Advisor pursuant to the Plan
is 0.25% of the Fund's average daily net assets. All payments will be reviewed
by the Fund's Board of Directors. However, it is possible that in certain
periods, the amount of the Advisor's compensation could exceed the Advisor's
distribution expenses resulting in a profit to the Advisor.
The changes in the fee structure and the rule 12b-1 plan was implemented on
March 2, 1998.
Furthermore, starting April 1, 1998, the Fund will impose a 2% redemption
fee which will be taken out of the proceeds of any redemption of shares
purchased after that date and redeemed within six months of purchase (other than
shares purchased by participants in company-sponsored retirement plans). The
redemption fee is payable to the Fund.
Fremont Funds and the Advisor have received from the Securities and
Exchange Commission an order (the "SEC Order") exempting the Fund in the future
from the provisions of the 1940 Act that require the shareholders of the Fund to
approve the Fund's sub-advisory agreement(s) and any amendments thereto. The SEC
Order permits the Advisor to hire new sub-advisors, terminate sub-advisors,
rehire existing sub-advisors whose agree-
<PAGE>
SUPPLEMENT
ments have been assigned (and thus automatically terminated), and modify
sub-advisory agreements without the prior approval of shareholders. By
eliminating shareholder approval in these matters, the Advisor would have
greater flexibility in managing sub-advisors, and shareholders would save the
considerable expense involved in holding shareholder meetings and soliciting
proxies. The Advisor may, in its discretion, manage all or a portion of the
Fund's portfolio directly with or without the use of a sub-advisor.
The Board of Directors and shareholders have also approved a change in
status of the Fund from diversified to non-diversified status. In the case of a
non-diversified mutual fund, the Investment Company Act imposes no limitations
on investments in any one issuer even though the mutual fund would still be
subject to the diversification requirements of the Internal Revenue Code
necessary to achieve pass-through tax status. Under the Internal Revenue Code,
with respect to 50% of a non-diversified fund's assets, not more than 5% can be
invested in the securities of any one company and the mutual fund cannot own
more than 10% of any company's outstanding voting securities. With respect to
the remaining 50% of a non-diversified fund's assets, not more than 25% may be
invested in the securities of any one company.
The change to non-diversified status was made because Bee & Associates'
investment strategy is to identify a selected number of under-researched
companies and invest only in those companies that offer the best long-term
investment prospects. This approach tends to result in portfolios that contain
only 20 to 25 stocks. Conversion of the Fund to a non-diversified fund will
allow the Fund's assets to be concentrated in those ideas which Bee & Associates
identifies as the most likely to produce significant capital appreciation.
However, if the Fund has fewer portfolio positions, it can be expected to be
more volatile, and a decrease in the market price of any one or more of its
portfolio positions will have a greater negative impact on the Fund's net asset
value per share than might be the case if the Fund held a widely diversified
portfolio.
1 The Advisor anticipates waiving fees and reimbursing the Fund for other
expenses in order to limit total operating expenses of the Fund to 1.50% of
average daily net assets through the end of the Fund's fiscal year ending
October 31, 1999. Absent such reduction, actual total fund operating expenses is
estimated to be at 1.80% of average daily net assets. To the extent management
fees are waived and/or other expenses are reimbursed by the Advisor, the Advisor
may elect to recapture such amounts subject to the following conditions: the
Advisor must request reimbursement within three years from the year in which the
initial waiver and/or reimbursement is made, and the Board of Directors must
approve the reimbursement, and the Fund must be able to make the reimbursement
and still stay within the then current operating expense limitation.