GABELLI CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES FUND INC /DE
N-30D, 1998-03-09
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                          THE GABELLI  
                          CONVERTIBLE
                          SECURITIES
                          FUND, INC.

Annual Report
December 31, 1997

<PAGE>

                          [GRAPHIC OMITTED]

                          THE GABELLI  
                          CONVERTIBLE
                          SECURITIES
                          FUND, INC.

Our cover icon represents the underpinnings of Gabelli. The Teton mountains in
Wyoming represent what we believe in in America -- that creativity, ingenuity,
hard work and a global uniqueness provide enduring values. They also stand out
in an increasingly complex, interconnected and interdependent economic world.

Investment Objective:

The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc. is a closed-end, diversified
management investment company whose primary objective is to seek a high level of
total return through a combination of current income and capital appreciation by
investing in convertible securities.

                   This report is printed on recycled paper.


<PAGE>

[PHOTO OMITTED]

To Our Shareholders,

      Driven by low  inflation,  low interest  rates,  good  corporate  earnings
gains,  deals,  stock repurchase  programs and liquidity (the continuing  strong
flow of cash into U.S. equity funds),  stocks posted strong gains in 1997. Until
correcting  in late  December,  large cap growth  stocks  continued  to lead the
market  parade.  However,  large cap value  and mid and small cap  indices  also
posted solid gains. As hybrids,  convertible securities benefitted both from the
rise in  underlying  equity  prices and higher bond prices  spawned by declining
interest rates.

      In the fourth  quarter of 1997, the U.S.  stock market  suffered  repeated
bouts of the Asian Flu. As we write,  the patient  remains  unstable.  While the
International  Monetary Fund is ministering to ailing Asian economies,  the ever
vigilant Dr. Greenspan is carefully  monitoring the U.S.  economy's vital signs.
As we head into 1998,  we will be making our rounds as well.  We are  relatively
pleased with the patient's condition,  but as always, are on the lookout for any
symptoms of a relapse.

      For the twelve  months ended  December 31, 1997,  The Gabelli  Convertible
Securities  Fund,  Inc.'s  ("Convertible   Securities  Fund")  net  asset  value
increased to $11.48 after  adjusting  for the $0.60 per share  dividend  paid on
December 26, 1997. This represents an increase of 2.8% for the quarter and 13.5%
for the year and  compares  to the  average  returns  of -1.4% and 17.6% for the
Lipper Analytical Services,  Inc.  Convertible  Securities Fund Index over these
respective periods.

      The  three-  and  five-year  average  annual  returns  of the  Convertible
Securities  Fund were 12.3% and 9.8%,  respectively.  Since inception on July 3,
1989 through  December 31, 1997,  the  Convertible  Securities  Fund  achieved a
129.1% total return which  represents an average annual return of 10.2%.  Strong
equity  markets in the U.S.  helped to enhance the  performance  of  convertible
securities.  Such an  environment  enables us to maintain  the Fund's  long-term
profitability.

      The Fund's common shares on the New York Stock  Exchange ended the quarter
at $10.3125, up 6.4% for the quarter, up 22.2% for the past twelve months and up
19.8% from its initial price of $11.25 on March 31, 1995 after adjusting for the
reinvestment of dividends  totaling $2.845 per share which were paid during this
period.

      Our Fund is  managed  with the goal of  achieving  a 600-800  basis  point
spread above long-term  treasury yields.  We hope to generate these returns over
the long term. This is the type of performance  that our Fund has been known for
and we  anticipate  will  continue  in  the  future.  Of  course,  there  are no
guarantees.

      Over the past few  months  the  Fund's  shares  have  traded at an average
discount of approximately 13% to the net asset value. At these price levels, the
Fund is an  ideal  opportunity  for  investors  to add to their  positions.  Our
monthly cash purchase program  provides an easy way for registered  Shareholders
to acquire  additional  shares at the current market price at no commission.  In
addition,  to  underscore  that "we eat our own  cooking",  the  Adviser and its
affiliates have announced their intention to buy up to one million common shares
in the open market  (569,264 of which have been acquired to date).  The Fund has
also recently  instituted a share  repurchase  program which we discuss later in
this report.


<PAGE>

INVESTMENT RESULTS (a)(c)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        Quarter
                                      --------------------------------------------
                                        1st          2nd         3rd         4th            Year
                                        ---          ---         ---         ---            ----
<S>                                   <C>          <C>         <C>          <C>            <C>   
1997:   Net Asset Value ..........    $11.13       $11.38      $11.81       $11.48         $11.48
        Total Return .............      1.7%         3.5%        5.0%         2.8%          13.5%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1996:   Net Asset Value ..........    $11.28       $11.33      $11.23       $11.08         $11.08
        Total Return .............      3.6%         1.6%        0.3%         2.6%           8.4%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1995:   Net Asset Value ..........    $11.14       $11.51      $11.64       $11.01         $11.01
        Total Return .............      5.1%         5.2%        3.0%         1.1%          15.0%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1994:   Net Asset Value ..........    $11.54       $11.39      $11.60       $10.60         $10.60
        Total Return .............      0.2%        (1.3)%       1.8%        (0.9)%         (0.2)%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1993:   Net Asset Value ..........    $12.07       $12.36      $12.75       $11.52         $11.52
        Total Return .............      5.4%         2.4%        3.2%         1.5%          13.1%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1992:   Net Asset Value ..........    $11.29       $11.52      $11.90       $11.45         $11.45
        Total Return .............      3.5%         2.0%        3.3%         3.6%          13.0%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1991:   Net Asset Value ..........    $11.06       $11.27      $11.57       $10.91         $10.91
        Total Return .............      5.6%         1.9%        2.7%         1.8%          12.5%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1990:   Net Asset Value ..........    $10.56       $10.68      $10.56       $10.47         $10.47
        Total Return .............      1.5%         2.1%       (1.1)%        3.8%           6.3%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1989:   Net Asset Value ..........     __           __         $10.54       $10.51         $10.51
        Total Return .............     __           __           5.4%(b)      0.8%           6.3%(b)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   Average Annual Returns - December 31, 1997 (a)
                   ----------------------------------------------
           1 Year ...........................................       13.5%
           5 Year ...........................................        9.8%
           Life of Fund (b) .................................       10.2%
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) Total return and average  annual return  reflect  changes in net asset value
and  reinvestment of dividends and are net of expenses.  Of course,  the returns
noted represent past performance and do not guarantee future results. Investment
returns and the principal value of an investment will fluctuate. When shares are
sold  they  may be  worth  more or less  than  their  original  cost.  (b)  From
commencement of operations on July 3, 1989. (c) The Fund converted to closed-end
status on March 31, 1995.

              Dividend History -- Common Stock
- ------------------------------------------------------------
Payment Date           Rate Per Share     Reinvestment Price
- ------------           --------------     ------------------
December 26, 1997          $0.600                $10.49
September 26, 1997         $0.120                $10.44
June 27, 1997              $0.120               $  9.96
March 27, 1997             $0.120               $  9.63
December 27, 1996          $0.375               $  9.51
September 23, 1996         $0.120               $  9.73
June  24, 1996             $0.120                $10.17
March 25, 1996             $0.120                $10.41
December 27, 1995          $0.750                $10.95
September 27, 1995         $0.200                $11.10
June 27, 1995              $0.200                $11.21
December 31, 1994          $0.900                $10.60
December 31, 1993          $1.425                $11.52
December 31, 1992          $0.876                $11.45
December 31, 1991          $0.865                $10.91
December 31, 1990          $0.490                $10.47
June 28, 1990              $0.100                $10.68
March 29, 1990             $0.100                $10.55
December 29, 1989          $0.115                $10.51
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                      
              [Graphic Omitted -- Depicting Investment Strategies]

What We Do

      The success of momentum  investing in recent years and  investors'  desire
for instant  gratification have combined to make value investing appear dull. At
the risk of being dull, we will once again  describe the "boring" value approach
that has seen us through  both good and bad markets over the last 8 years at The
Gabelli  Convertible  Securities  Fund and for over 20  years at  Gabelli  Asset
Management  Company. In past reports, we have tried to articulate our investment
philosophy  and  methodology.  The following  graphic  further  illustrates  the
interplay among the four components of our valuation approach.


                                       2
<PAGE>

      Our  focus  is  on  free  cash  flow;  earnings  before  interest,  taxes,
depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) minus the capital expenditures  necessary
to grow the  business.  We  believe  free cash flow is the best  barometer  of a
business'  value.   Rising  free  cash  flow  often   foreshadows  net  earnings
improvement.  We also look at earnings per share  trends.  Unlike Wall  Street's
ubiquitous  earnings momentum  players,  we do not try to forecast earnings with
accounting  precision and then trade stocks based on quarterly  expectations and
realities.  We simply try to position  ourselves in front of long-term  earnings
uptrends.  In  addition,  we  analyze  on  and  off  balance  sheet  assets  and
liabilities such as plant and equipment,  inventories,  receivables,  and legal,
environmental  and health care issues.  We want to know  everything and anything
that will add to or detract  from our  private  market  value  (PMV)  estimates.
Finally,  we look for a catalyst;  something happening in the company's industry
or indigenous to the company itself that will surface value.  In the case of the
independent  telephone  stocks,  the  catalyst is a  regulatory  change.  In the
agricultural  equipment  business,  it is the increasing  world-wide  demand for
American  food  and  feed  crops.  In other  instances,  it may be a  change  in
management,  sale or spin-off of a division or the  development  of a profitable
new business.

      Once we  identify  stocks  that  qualify  as  fundamental  and  conceptual
bargains,  we then become patient  investors.  This has been a proven  long-term
method for preserving and enhancing wealth in the U.S.  equities market.  At the
margin,  our new investments are focused on businesses that are well-managed and
will benefit from sustainable  long-term economic dynamics.  These include macro
trends,  such as the  globalization  of the market in filmed  entertainment  and
telecommunications, and micro trends, such as an increased focus on productivity
enhancing goods and services.

Convertible Securities are "Hybrids"

      It is important to understand our stock selection discipline because price
movement in the underlying  equity will  generally  have the greatest  impact on
convertible  securities pricing.  The convertible  securities market consists of
bonds,  debentures,  corporate  notes,  preferred  stocks and  warrants or other
similar  securities  which may be converted  into or exchanged  for a prescribed
amount of  common  stock or other  equity  security  of the same or a  different
issuer  within a  particular  period of time at a  specified  price or  formula.
Converts are "hybrid" securities that combine the capital appreciation potential
of equities with the higher yield of fixed income instruments.

      Our strategy incorporates the purchase of convertible securities which are
trading at a premium  above  parity  with the common  stock but which  generally
provide a higher yield and, over time, capital  appreciation.  We will also seek
out  "busted"   converts,   where  the  underlying   common  stock  has  dropped
significantly  and the values of both the  conversion  privilege and the convert
are down. Such  securities  will provide both high yields and long-term  capital
appreciation potential.

Our Investment Objectives

      Our mandate is to preserve and enhance our shareholders'  wealth through a
conservative, disciplined approach to convertible securities investing. Our goal
is to generate  profitable  returns in strong  markets and protect  principal in
weak markets by taking  advantage of the unique  characteristics  of convertible
securities.

Good Things Come To Those  Who Wait

      The  critical  element to our  success  in the  equities  and  convertible
securities  markets  has been  patience  in both the  selection  process  and in
waiting for the values of portfolio positions to be recognized. We will continue
to be patient and  opportunistic  in  selecting  converts  for the Fund and will
invest in short-term  instruments  (including  time  sensitive  work-outs)  when
appropriate.  We bought mostly short-term U.S. Treasury obligations in the past.
However,  the U.S.  financial system has improved  significantly and we now take
advantage of other  short-term  alternatives.  In this regard,  the  Convertible
Securities Fund at times engages in risk arbitrage to generate returns.  By risk
arbitrage we mean investing in "event"  driven  situations;  primarily,  but not
exclusively,  in  announced  mergers,


                                       3
<PAGE>

acquisitions,  reorganizations  and other "workout"  opportunities.  In order to
avoid overall market risk in these  opportunities,  the Fund will concentrate on
the lower risk transactions.

      We borrow a quote from Warren Buffet to explain our occasional use of risk
arbitrage in the Fund:

      "Our  subsidiaries  sometimes  engage in  arbitrage as an  alternative  to
holding  short-term  cash  equivalents.  We  prefer,  of  course,  to make major
long-term  commitments.  But we often  have more cash than good  ideas.  At such
times arbitrage sometimes promises much greater returns than Treasury Bills and,
equally  important,  cools any temptation we may have to relax our standards for
long-term investments."

      In short,  the high cash  position in the Fund does not reflect any effort
on  our  part  to  time  the  convertible  securities  market.  It is  rather  a
consequence  of our  value  oriented  discipline.  We are  always  hard  at work
evaluating  opportunities and identifying  fundamental bargains to progress to a
more fully  invested  posture.  However,  we will not  stretch  our  fundamental
parameters and introduce greater market risk to the portfolio.

Corporate Governance

      One of the Gabelli Convertible  Securities Fund's benchmark  objectives is
to increase the public market price to equal or exceed the net asset value. That
is, to eliminate the current market  discount.  How do we accomplish this? There
are several  factors that  historically  have worked to narrow the  discounts of
closed-end  funds.  These include  stock  repurchase  programs and  distribution
policies. The former we have instituted, the latter we are considering.

Stock Repurchase Plan - Q & A

Q:  What is a stock repurchase plan?

      A stock repurchase plan allows a company to buy back its own shares in the
open market (in our case, the New York Stock  Exchange).  This reduces the total
number of shares outstanding and increases the earnings per share.

Q:  When did the Convertible Securities Fund implement a stock repurchase plan?

      At a special  meeting of the Board of Directors  on October 27, 1997,  the
Board  authorized  the  repurchase  of up to 250,000  shares of the  Convertible
Securities Fund's outstanding  shares. We were the first company on the New York
Stock  Exchange  to  announce a stock  repurchase  program on this date when the
market declined 554.26 points, or 7.2%.

      The  Convertible  Securities Fund may from time to time purchase shares of
its  capital  stock in the open market when the shares are trading at a discount
of 10% or more  from  the net  asset  value of the  shares.  In  total,  through
December 31, 1997, 44,600 shares were repurchased in the open market.

      Similarly,  an affiliated  closed-end  fund, The Gabelli Equity Trust, was
the first  company on the New York Stock  Exchange to implement a stock  buyback
program on October 19, 1987,  after the market  crash.  At the time,  the Equity
Trust was trading at a discount to net asset value and  represented an excellent
value for the Trust to  acquire  its own  shares.  This  stock  repurchase  plan
resulted in the purchase of 800,000 shares in the open market from 1987 to 1988.

Q:  What is the benefit of a stock repurchase plan?

      When  the  Convertible  Securities  Fund  purchases  its own  shares  at a
discount to NAV, the Fund realizes a benefit equal to the difference between the
net asset  value and the  purchase  price.  This  benefit is credited to the net
assets of the remaining shares,  thus boosting the NAV. The larger the discount,
the greater the benefit on the NAV.


                                       4
<PAGE>

      The market price is determined by supply and demand factors.  If there are
more sellers than buyers the price will decline until buyers enter the market to
establish a sales price. A stock  repurchase  program  increases  demand for the
Convertible Securities Fund's shares in the open market. This provides a willing
buyer of fund shares which offsets sales of fund shares.

Distribution Policy - Q & A

Q:  What is a distribution policy?

     A fund with a  distribution  policy  is a fund  which  establishes  a fixed
payment  each  year to its  shareholders  as a  percentage  of net  assets  or a
specific dollar amount. For example, a fund with a 10% distribution  policy will
pay  out  10% of its  average  net  assets  every  year,  either  on an  annual,
semi-annual or quarterly basis.

Q:  What is the benefit of a distribution policy?

      Investors  usually favor funds that offer a constant  stream of cash, or a
predictable  yield.  Thus,  there is more  demand for funds with a  distribution
policy and historically  they trade at a more narrow discount than funds without
a distribution policy.

Q:  Why  is  the  Convertible   Securities   Fund   considering   an  8%  annual
    distribution policy? What are the "mechanics?"

     In order to  accelerate  our  effort to drive  the  current  discount  to a
premium,   the   Convertible   Securities  Fund  is  considering  an  8%  annual
distribution  policy similar in structure to the Gabelli Equity Trust, which has
employed a 10% annual distribution policy since August of 1988.

      To  illustrate,  the Gabelli  Equity Trust  currently  pays out 10% of its
average net asset value per share. The Fund's normal policy is to make quarterly
distributions  of $0.25 per share at the end of each of the first three calendar
quarters of each year.  The Fund's  distribution  in December for each  calendar
year is an adjusting distribution.  The amount is equal to the greater of 10% of
the  average of the net asset  value per share of the Fund as of the last day of
the four preceding calendar quarters or the minimum distribution requirements of
the Internal Revenue Code.

      In the case of the Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, the Fund would pay
out a minimum annual  distribuion of 8% of the net asset value. The method would
be to pay $0.20 per share in each of the first three  quarters of the year and a
distribution  in the  fourth  quarter  of a  sufficient  amount to pay 8% of the
average  net  assets  of  the  Fund  or  to  satisfy  the  minimum  distribution
requirements of the Internal Revenue Code.


                                       5
<PAGE>

BARRON'S 1998 Roundtable

     We would like to share with you  excerpts  from  BARRON'S  1998  Roundtable
interview with our Chief Investment Officer.  Discussion of individual companies
is not necessarily reflective of the Fund's entire portfolio.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
January 26, 1998             BARRON'S o Rountable '98
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                            ==========================
                                    BARRON'S
                                   ROUNDTABLE
                                        o
                                  BARTON BIGGS
                                   SCOTT BLACK
                                  MARIO GABELLI
                               ARCHIE MACALLASTER
                                    JOHN NEFF
                                  MARC PERKINS
                                  JAMES ROGERS
                                   ART SAMBERG
                                  OSCAR SCHAFER
                                 CARLENE ZIEGLER
                                  FELIX ZULAUF
                            ==========================
                      (the following has been excerpted:)

                                Discordant Notes
             Our panel takes different tacks in an uncertain market

Fasten  your  seat  belts.  You're  in for a bumpy  ride  in  this,  the  second
installment of Barron's 1998  Investment  Roundtable.  Maybe it was all panelist
Mario  Gabelli's  fault.  The  recorded  strains  of the hymn he  played  at the
session's  start sounded eerily  discordant in the coolly stark precincts of the
SohoGrandHotel, where we met. But more likely, Mr. Market was to blame. With one
full week of 1998 trading under his belt when the 11 members our  Roundtable met
with a phalanx of this magazine's editors on the morning of Monday,  January 12,
Mr.  Market was  refusing  to follow the  bull's  script.  The DJIA had lost 222
points the previous  Friday and escalating  turmoil in Asia that morning briefly
knocked the  blue-chip  average to what stands so far as its low in this nascent
year. Certainly not the end of the world, the panel agreed. But beyond that, the
consensus cracked.

   The disagreements, some of them sharp, were many -- and are clearly reflected
in the investment selections made by the four panelists who are featured in this
middle section of the  Roundtable:  Mario  Gabelli,  Archie  MacAllaster,  Felix
Zulauf and Scott Black.

   When it came  time to  talk  about  the  market,  Mario  shed  the  religious
trappings  and came down squarely on the side of  agnosticism  -- the index will
fluctuate 10%, in each direction -- but he's still a true believer in deals. The
more  the  merrier.  Thus,  the  founder  and  guiding  light of  Gabelli  Asset
Management and Chairman of Gabelli Funds, Inc. waxed  enthusiastic  about values
to be surfaced and  synergism to be unleashed  in  heavy-metal  industries,  the
media and via the Internet.  Not exactly new themes for Mario. But why mess with
success?  Buoyed by a slew of spinoffs,  split-ups,  takeouts and the like,  the
list of stocks Mario picked last year racked up peak gains averaging  almost 60%
- -- the same sort of moves that  propelled no fewer than four of his mutual funds
to the top of the growth-fund rankings for '97.

   For all the details, read on.
                                                           -- Kathryn M. Welling

PART 1:  Outlook on the Economy and Stock Market

Barron's: Why don't we start with Southeast Asia. Felix?

Gabelli: [Plays recording] "Nearer my God to thee . . ."

Q: Mario, you know, in this hotel, that's sacrilegious!

Gabelli:  I want you to know,  eight people played that last song on the Titanic
and there are 11 of us here.  

Samberg:  I am hearing a lot of hypotheses,  like I've always heard, from people
who have been generally negative. And I don't know how much of it is fitting the
current  scare to the mood,  versus  reality.  I  personally  don't  know how to
predict it. It is a challenge. But a lot of it, I think, is old bear-market talk
in new dress.

Q: What old bear-market talk? There hasn't been an old bear market.

Samberg:  I know. But people have been fighting the bull market for years.

Zeigler:  The other  bullish  thing for the  consumer is that wages are going up
faster than inflation.

Gabelli: There's a lot going for the consumer. He has a tax break. More broadly,
if you step back and consider that, for 100 years,  you had a tug of war between
a centrally  planned  economy and a  free-market  system -- and the  free-market
system  won when the  Berlin  Wall came  down -- you can gain some  perspective.
Right now the excesses  that have  developed are creating a really nasty problem
in Southeast  Asia.  And they're 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                       6
<PAGE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
January 26, 1998             BARRON'S o Rountable '98
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
going to have to come to grips with how to cope with that. But the silver lining
in all this -- if we don't get the  equivalent of a  Smoot-Hawley  -- is that we
should emerge with the free-market  system  actually  reinforced in places where
there still have been  strangleholds  on the markets -- whether in the way China
handles  Hong Kong,  whether in South  Korea  with  their  chaebols.  So we have
problems. But they're birthing pains.

   Another thing that is fairly obvious to anyone,  like Arthur, who has studied
Japan,  is that if you  were a CEO in  Japan  --  other  than a few  enlightened
individuals like [President Nobuyuki] Idei at Sony -- you basically went to your
country club and got compensated for how much of the market,  on a global basis,
your product commanded.  Never did you get compensated for share of profits.  If
we see a major  revolution  take  place  out of these  seeds of  discontent  and
challenges that we face right now, you could see "share of profits" becoming the
mantra for the CEOs of the future in these  countries.  ThatOd  lend itself to a
lot of very bright sides.

   Having said that,  there is no question  you need a Marshall  Plan-equivalent
for Southeast Asia. But in 1973,  nobody sitting in this room could tell you how
we were going to handle $3 energy going to $10.

Neff: Likewise, nobody knew how we'd cope with the S&Ls collapsing.

Gabelli:  You have  problems.  Structural  imbalances on a global basis.  You've
heard about all the capital  invested in Southeast  Asia and the  problems  with
that.  If I were a Thai  businessman,  I'd  cut my  price  down  to my  variable
incremental cost and try to export as much as I could -- beggar thy neighbor, if
I had to.

Rogers:  Mario, in 1973 the U.S. was a creditor nation by a gigantic amount. Now
we are the world's  largest debtor  nation.  Who is going to bail us out -- bail
the world out -- this time?

Samberg: We don't need a bailout.

Rogers: Half of Asia does. What do you mean, the world doesn't need --

Schafer: Don't worry. Jimmy has to put that statement in every year.

Gabelli:  Let's do some  numbers.  You have a trade  deficit of, say,  $125-$150
billion in the U.S. -- the run rate.  I'm just cuffing the numbers.  Roughly $50
billion of that, the last time I looked, was with China and $50 billion was with
Japan. A small portion was with the newly  industrialized  countries -- whatever
they  call  them.  NICs.  A big  part of our  trade  deficit  is also due to the
importation  of oil -- and a big part of that,  at the  margin,  is not going to
increase, because either GDP is shaved by 1%, or prices drop.

Zulauf: Or both.

Gabelli:  Or both.  When I try to analyze what impact these  changes have on the
U.S.  economy and on the companies I follow, I look at the consumer -- who, last
time I looked, was still two-thirds of GDP. I say to myself, "The consumer is in
fabulous shape." I mean, they are rooting for the Denver Broncos,  as opposed to
Green Bay.

Ziegler: Boo!

Gabelli:  They are basically fat. Full employment.  They have been working hard,
earning extra bonuses, making a lot of money. Maybe a little less overtime isn't
so bad. All of a sudden,  the $140,000  mortgage on my house, I can refinance at
1.5% less.  That's  $150 a month I'm going to save.  In  addition,  my  gasoline
prices are coming  down.  It's a warm winter -- my heating  fuel bills aren't as
high. Hey, I'm in pretty good shape. Do I worry about my stock portfolio?  Hell,
everybody tells me I'm in it for the long term, anyway.

   So my sense is, yes, Asia's problems will shave 1% or 2% off GDP growth. Come
the spring,  you will have a few more issues to worry about.  But I have to live
through this -- maybe,  because I am uncertain,  I won't spend that extra $1,000
to go to the Caribbean.  But the economy is going to muddle  through this,  just
like we did in 1973.

   So,  what are my  concerns?  Yes,  at the  margin,  we've lost 1% of real GDP
growth.  Profits that four weeks ago you might have  expected to be up 6% on the
year,  now are going to be flat. The market has to adjust.  

Neff: That 6% was a modest  expectation.  The Street's earnings  estimates -- if
you averaged what all the analysts were saying -- probably were 12% or 15%.

Q: Your  shareholders  will have to adjust to it, too -- provided you still have
some.

Gabelli:  My concern,  as we are sharpening our pencils in February-March,  will
be.  How do the world  economies  adjust?  

   Japan is the one I worry about.  And Brazil/Latin  America.  They have a much
greater  impact  on the U.S.  then the  NICs.  This  undertow  weOre  seeing  in
Indonesia -- who cares about  Indonesia -- they have 250 million people but only
one-half of 1% of GDP, probably. There are only 125 million people in Japan, but
its a real power, and how they handle this challenge.

   To get back to the U.S.  stock  market,  the other  element I always  like to
consider  is the flow of funds.  The amount of money  coming back into the stock
market  from  deals -- and I happen  to be the deal guy here -- was  about  $920
billion in 1997, up from $650 billion in 1996.  And roughly $400 billion of that
was cash, up from $340 billion in 1996. So, yes,  something will be siphoned off
for IPOs.  Some will go to the  outside  world and the wild card will be how the
individual investor reacts through mutual funds. But the amount that is going to
flow into the market in 1998 from deals -- and  especially  the cash  portion of
that  -- is  still  going  to be  staggering  and  provide  a  terrific  kind of
buttressing effect for the overall market.

PART 2:  Gabelli Talks Stocks

Barron's:  Mario,  did you  prepare a dance to go along with the song you played
earlier?

Gabelli:  "Nearer My God to Thee" just isn't that kind of ditty.  My conclusion,
in the earlier part of the meeting [Roundtable, Part 1, January 19] was that the
market has a certain  framework  -- about 10% downside to get  intrinsic  value,
with a lot of dynamics at work, and maybe up 10% looking out 18 months.  We want
to look out to the middle of 1999 to generate  long-term  capital  gains because
the long-term  capital gains rate is now 20% for an 18-month  holding  period --
and it's not only what you make, but what you keep.

   One dynamic I look for in the market is a  continuation  of deals;  1998 will
again  be a  record  year  for  transactions,  with  other  forms  of  financial
engineering-split-ups,  split-offs,  leveraged stubs,  consolidation  plays-also
being  drivers.  As I have  indicated in the past, in the  Nineties,  one of the
themes is consolidation.  You buy a fragmented  industry and get the benefits of
synergistic dynamics at work. You eliminate overhead. You get economies of scale
in the financial and operating areas.

   We've talked in earlier Roundtables about banks, brokers, broadcasters. We've
talked about the consolidation in the defense industry,  which is almost over in
the U.S. The utilities  industry is absolutely  just in the beginning stage of a
major  consolidation play. We've talked about the Bell operating  companies.  In
fact, you've had two phone deals already in 1998:  Southern New England Telecom,
which  I was  going  to talk  about,  and,  obviously,  AT&T's  buying  Teleport
Communications Group. The names I'm looking at in the financial engineering area
are Rollins,  Gaylord  Entertainment,  Whitman -- the Pepsi  bottling part after
Whitman is split into three  parts.  In the  telephone  area,  Telephone  & Data
Systems. Consolidation is still going on among the vendors to Boeing: Sequa, SPS
Technologies and Fairchild.  There is going to be continued consolidation in the
auto-parts industry. My favorites are Wynn's International, Modine Manufacturing
and Echlin.  And there is a lot to happen,  still, in the cable,  television and
broadcasting area. That's it. Thanks.

Q: Won't the stock market  decline put a damper on all the deals?  A lot are for
both 
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                                       7
<PAGE>

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January 26, 1998             BARRON'S o Rountable '98
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
cash and stock.  If the stocks  flame out,  so do the deals.  

Gabelli:  The chairman of Wells Fargo put it well when he reportedly  said,  "At
these kinds of multiples,  these kinds of prices, if somebody came to you with a
story that would cause the currency of the combined company to appreciate,  then
I am open to it." The notion of using  equity as a currency for deals in part is
driven by the dictates of pooling-of-interests  accounting. But it's also driven
by the fact that  equity is a  surrogate  for junk  bonds in the  'Eighties  and
company-issued  debt in the  'Sixties.  Some of it is junk  equity.  There is no
question  that you want to  leverage  it out.  The  banks,  at this  point,  are
reasonably  flush  with cash.  You can  borrow  today at rates of 5 3/4% and 6%.
Locking  in those  kinds of rates will  still be a driver of  transactions.  The
first two megadeals we've seen this year used paper. SBC  Communications  -- the
old Southwestern  Bell-buying Southern New England Telecom was a $4 billion deal
using SBC paper,  and AT&T is using its stock to buy Teleport.  In addition,  in
between those,  we've already seen probably 20 or 30 other  transactions using a
combination  of cash and stock as  currency.  I don't see any  reason  why deals
should slow. With the long-term  capital-gains  rate coming down, it seems to me
that the sun, the moon and the stars are all in alignment on this. That is, I am
getting  reasonably  good EBITDA.  I am getting a high multiple of EBITDA.  I am
going to be able to use the lowest  possible  capital  gains rate. So there is a
lot of motivation  for companies to sell or enter into  financial  transactions.
Plus, there are still a lot of drivers of financial  engineering.  So everything
that I've  thought  about since the day General  Electric  set off this trend by
going  after  Kemper in a hostile  transaction,  which  happened to be March 14,
1994,  continues to drive  transactions.  They are global, they are synergistic,
and there are still dynamics in the consolidation phase. But unlike 1994 -- when
trying to make money in the market was like walking through waist-high mud -- in
1998, you still have an exit strategy, one based on a large number of deals. You
are seeing a lot more  overbids,  and the  buyers  are all  types.  I think that
continues.

Neff: Over-bids? Do you mean somebody bidding more than the first suitor?

Gabelli:  Right. For example,  in your industry,  John -- not that I want to tie
you to the steel industry -- Bethlehem Steel bid for Lukens.  Allegheny Teledyne
bid for Lukens. Now we have another round coming. I mean, Kollmorgen has knocked
on the door at Pacific  Scientific.  You'll see more  over-bids.  But let me put
some meat on that bare-bones overview I gave you. Today I am going to talk about
two loaded  laggards.  One is Viacom,  which was  trading on Friday  [January 9]
around 40. There are two classes of stock. There's VIA, with 69.5 million shares
outstanding,  of which [Viacom  Chairman]  Sumner Redstone owns  two-thirds.  My
clients  own seven  million  of the  balance;  I want to give  full  disclosure,
otherwise,  Archie will ask. Then there also are 284 million  common shares out,
so there are 354 million shares in total. They have about $8 billion of debt and
$1 billion of  preferred,  so say $9 billion of debt and  preferred.  I believe,
over the next 12 months,  you will see them selling their  publishing  business.
[Viacom on January 14 announced plans to sell the educational,  professional and
reference  publishing  operations  of its  Simon  &  Schuster  unit as part of a
strategic restructuring, assisted by Morgan Stanley.] Publishing is about a $400
million EBITDA business.  They should get 12-14 times EBITDA,  or $5-$6 billion,
for it. They have a tax basis of $3.5 billion on it. They should be able to sell
Blockbuster,  or do a tracking  stock with it or liquefy part of it. They should
get $3-$4  billion  for that,  even in  today's  world.  They are  changing  the
dynamics of the business by having the movie companies  provide videos and share
in the rental revenues, instead of just buying the videos.

Q:  But  Blockbuster  still  has the  same  management.  What's  to keep it from
screwing up again?

Gabelli:  No, it doesn't -- Sumner Redstone is still there. But he's changed the
management at Blockbuster. I am arguing that Blockbuster and the publishing unit
will be sold for $9 billion.  A year from now,  Viacom will be a company with no
debt and two businesses.  One, a world-class cable network,  which includes MTV,
Nickelodeon,  Nick at Nite; the other, the movie studio.  Even though Disney and
Fox are coming after  Nickelodeon,  its cable  networks' $1 billion of cash flow
should grow 12%-15% for the next three-four years.

Q: How do you know  Redstone  isn't going to take the dough and do the same dumb
thing he did with Blockbuster?

Gabelli: Let's not get into revisionist history here.

Q: That is what we are about to get.

Gabelli: I am not defending Sumner Redstone, but I am going to talk about Sumner
Redstone.  What happened was that,  as a theater  operator back in the 'Sixties,
'Seventies and 'Eighties, you always lusted for the casting couch-tried to buy a
movie studio.  So when  Paramount put itself up for sale in 1993, he bid. But to
get Paramount,  Redstone  needed cash flow. He bought  Blockbuster to get it. It
was the  steppingstone  in his  strategy  and he knew  then  that it was a lousy
tactic.

Q: Well, he kept that to himself.

Gabelli:  I don't think so. It was fairly  obvious what [H. Wayne]  Huizenga had
created in Blockbuster -- and what its vulnerable parts were. Anyway, now Viacom
has MTV,  Show-time and the broadcast  stations that generate $1 billion of cash
flow annually.  There are 350 million  shares,  a $14 billion market cap. So, in
effect,  you get the very  attractive  movie  studio  free,  plus you get  other
assets. When I shake it all out, I get a value of about $65 a share. I am buying
this stock. You don't have to buy it.

   The second, equally loaded laggard I want to talk about is Seagram. VO is the
symbol. But this is not about VO on the rocks, it's about VO on the upswing. The
stock was probably down 15% last year. There are 347 million shares. The debt is
a little more  difficult to get your hands around  because  [Seagram  CEO] Edgar
Bronfman Jr. made a strategic decision to go to war against Sumner Redstone.  He
beat  him in court  and was  then  able to buy the USA  Network  and the  Sci-Fi
Channel for $1.7 billion.  When I work the numbers, I come up with a debt figure
of about $4 billion. What Bronfman then did was package those channels with most
of his Universal TV production operation and exchange the whole bunch for 45% of
Home  Shopping  Network,  or  72  million  shares,  plus  some  cash.  Seagram's
distilled-spirits  business,  pre-Asia,  was going to do about  $900  million in
EBITDA.  I am now  estimating  only $700  million.  Two  reasons:  One,  all the
Martells that were sold for  X-dollars per bottle in Asia.  They may be drinking
more over there,  but they now are drinking their inventory as opposed to buying
more.  So Seagram's  EBITDA will be $200 million lower than  expected,  earnings
about $100 million lower.  Tropicana is doing quite well,  about $250 million of
EBITDA. So the liquids businesses generate a total of about $950 million of cash
flow.  I could  sell  those  businesses  today for around  $9.5  billion.  Grand
Metropolitan  and Guinness  merged last year [creating a company called Diageo],
changing the critical scale in the spirits  business.  So I think Seagram has to
take the distilled  business and merge it with Allied Domecq, or figure out some
other strategy  there.  [On January 18, the Sunday  Telegraph of London reported
that  the  two  companies  were  discussing  merging  their   alcoholic-beverage
businesses.]

   The  second  thing  Seagram  now has  going  for it is that it has  become  a
dominant  player  in  electronic  commerce.   As  Arthur  talked  about  earlier
[Roundtable,  Part  1],  when  you  have a brand  name,  you now can sell on the
Internet into the global
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                       8
<PAGE>

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January 26, 1998             BARRON'S o Rountable '98
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
marketplace.  Electronic  commerce,  to me, is where Sears Roebuck was 100 years
ago. I will not buy a product  anywhere today without checking out the brand and
the  price on the  Internet  and  figuring  out how to get it  delivered  to me.
Amazon.com  sells you a book;  you get it in the mail. I have looked for ways to
participate.  What is  emerging as a pure  wonderful  play on this -- aside from
Cendant (the new name of the merger between CUC  International and HFS Inc.) and
a couple of others -- is the one that I like, Home Shopping  Network.  [HSN CEO]
Barry Diller,  through HSN, has become a major outsourcer of electronic commerce
and will be one of the  leading  factors  on a global  basis.  So Home  Shopping
Network is structurally  attractive over the next five years as an entertainment
play, an  electronic-commerce  play.  Seagram realized:  "Hey, we can't own this
kind of talent. Let's rent it. Let's get involved with Barry Diller."

Q: What's Seagram worth?

Gabelli:  What I'm  sitting  on in  Seagram  is a liquids  business  worth  $9.5
billion,  or 10 times  EBITDA.  It also has 26  million  shares of Time  Warner,
valued in the  market at $1.5  billion.  Its 72  million  shares of HSN trade at
anywhere  from 45 to 50 each -- but that  probably  legs in,  over the next five
years, as the dominant  player in  electronic-commerce  marketplace.  Could be a
very attractive long-term vehicle.  Plus, you get a movie studio. Look at it any
way you want, you get a movie studio free. This company is reasonably attractive
at 31.  

Schafer:  What are you  saying  all the  pieces of  Seagram  are  worth?

Gabelli:  There's an $11 billion market cap, $4 billion of debt,  coming down to
$3 billion,  when the deal with HSN settles. You can look at it two ways, Oscar.
You can say they have $1.5  billion  of Time  Warner  and $3.5  billion  of Home
Shopping.  Time Warner is for sale, but Home Shopping is not. Home Shopping will
have 170 million shares out soon. There will be a very thick  prospectus  coming
out in the next 30 days. I think you will see Barry Diller  splitting it up. The
electronic-commerce  business,  which  will  consist  of the old  Home  Shopping
Network and Ticketmaster,  will have $250 million of EBITDA. It'll be a terrific
vehicle for  outsourcing  electronic  commerce  -- probably  one of the very few
companies  that  have  conceptualized  how to  actually  fulfill  sales  via the
Internet on a global  basis.  Then HSN also has a TV station  operation,  called
Silver King  Broadcasting.  Its negative cash flow is $30 million annually,  but

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                GABELLI'S PICKS
                                                                       Price
Company                                      Sym.         Exch.       1/12/98
- -------                                      ----         -----       -------
Rollins Inc.                                 ROL          NYSE        19-13/16
Whitman (Pepsi) wi                           WH           NYSE        15-18
Tel & Data Systems                           TDS          ASE         44-3/4
Sequa A                                      SQAA         NYSE        64-3/8
SPS  Technologies                            ST           NYSE        39-15/16
Fairchild                                    FA           NYSE        21-9/16
Wynn's Intl                                  WN           NYSE        21-43/256
Modine Mfg                                   MODI         NNM         33
Echlin                                       ECH          NYSE        34-3/4
Viacom A                                     VIA          ASE         42-1/4
Seagram                                      VO           NYSE        32-15/16
HSN                                          HSNI         NNM         47-3/4
Time Warner                                  TWX          NYSE        59-7/16
USWest Media Group                           UMG          NYSE        28-5/16
Cablevision Systems A                        CVC          ASE         88-5/8
Lillian Vernon                               LVC          ASE         16-5/8

                                "HALL OF SHAME"

Pennzoil                                     PZL          NYSE        60-3/8 
Reader's  Digest A                           RDA          NYSE        22-7/8 
Gaylord Entertainment                        GET          NYSE        30-1/16
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Diller will now marry that with USA,  one of the leading  cable  networks in the
country,  and Sci-Fi,  which is rapidly growing -- and they have $200 million of
cash flow. As I  fast-forward  three to four years, I can see $1 billion of cash
flow from HSN's  businesses  -- and a company that then can grow  double-digits,
exponentially.  So I like Home Shopping, I like Seagram's ownership in HSN. That
is why I am beating on the table.

Q: Couldn't they blow the whole thing with one bad movie?

Gabelli: Well, Titanic was a $250 million film-but I did play the song.

Q: Five  years  from now,  the  studios  will be  spending  $1 billion to make a
picture.

Gabelli:  You could say "Play It Again,  Sam," too.  Cleopatra does happen.  And
Water World.  And Titanic.  Very expensive  films. But then you have movies that
are less  expensive to produce,  like The Lost World:  Jurassic  Park,  that are
equally popular -- sometimes more popular. On balance, owning creative copyright
and content  through a  filmed-entertainment  company and  leveraging it up on a
global  basis  with  captive  distribution  has proven to be a  reasonably  good
business.

Neff: Still, when you pay $25 million for one star, it gets to be like the NBA.

Gabelli:  John,  do you know  what you  have to pay for a money  manager  today?
Running a studio is like drilling for oil. If you make one movie, you can lose a
lot of money. If you make a portfolio of movies look at the cost on the basis of
what share of the U.S. market you capture. The U.S. theatrical market -- you and
I pay $6 billion a year to see movies. The guys who make the movies get 45 cents
on the dollar of that.  That's $2.8  billion.  They could not make money if that
were their only window. But the video-rental  business is $20 billion.  Then you
start looking overseas.  How many television  stations are there in England,  in
France, in Germany? There are 370 million people on the European Continent. Even
in Indonesia there are 250 million people.  There is an incredible  appetite for
filmed  entertainment.  You have to leverage it up on a global basis;  do deals.
Those are some of the drivers, the dynamics.  You clearly cannot pay talent $100
million a film and make money.

Black:  The average  negative cost now is about $55 million.  So you need ticket
sales of $110 million just to break even in the U.S. on theatrical  sales. I was
at Disney not long ago.  The most  profitable  end of the  business  for them is
animated  features,  like  Aladdin.  That is where they hit the home-run  balls,
because they don't have to pay cartoon characters.  But even there, they do have
to compete for talent.  They said the  economics of the  business  right now are
terrible. So they're cutting the number of their feature films.

Gabelli: They all say that. They all lie. How do they cut back on features? Look
at Disney.

Black: I know, they have Miramax.

Gabelli:  So Miramax makes 20 movies that are  lower-budget.  Since I am running
out of time here, I will just mention Time Warner  again,  hitchhike on my prior
recommendations. The stock is 60.

   Another one I want to recommend is USWest Media Group, which is going through
financial engineering.  US West created USWest Media as a tracking stock. Within
the next 60 days,  they will convert it to standard C corporation  form and spin
it off. USWest Media will then be the third- or second-largest cable company. As
I fast-forward, a year from now, Time Warner will have somehow figured out a way
to buy  USWest  Media and then spin it off to the  public,  packaged  as a cable
company. The stock is at 29. It is worth $45.  Cablevision Systems,  which I did
not recommend a year ago, but which I have  recommended in the past -- and which
my clients own a lot of sells for 90 and has two businesses: cable systems and a
cable network.  The cable network is Rainbow Media  Holdings,  25% owned by NBC,
75% owned by  Cablevision.  There are three wonderful  channels:  American Movie
Classics, Bravo and Romance. No one can be without Romance.

Q: That's very touching.

Schafer: Don't they have Madison Square Garden, too?

Gabelli:  They sold 40% of their stake in Madison  Square Garden to Fox, so they
own only 60% of the Garden,  which has turned out to be  absolutely a phenomenal
deal.  When I look out into 1999 and 2000 -- at least 18 months  from now,  when
I'll have
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                                       9
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January 26, 1998             BARRON'S o Rountable '98
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
a long-term capital gain -- I see a company,  assuming this transaction with TCI
Inc. gets closed in the next 60 days, with 3.2 million cable customers clustered
in  Cleveland,  Boston and New York. A business unit that will have cash flow at
least $1 billion in the year 2000 in cable,  which is worth 10 times that. And a
company that has  wonderful  programming  -- in sports,  as well as in the three
genres I've already mentioned. It'll be worth $250 a share at that time.

Q: Isn't Cablevision also a company with a wonderful balance sheet?

Gabelli:  They have a $2.5  billion  deficit in book.  They have $4.2 billion of
debt. There is a very limited margin of safety.

Q: If, by chance, interest rates were to rise, could it cope?

Gabelli:  There are 90 million  shares  authorized.  There are 25 million shares
publicly  outstanding  now.  There will be 37 million when this deal with TCI is
concluded.  So you have 37 million shares in a very highly leveraged company. If
things  look dark in the  world,  they will look  better  for the  shareholders,
because  [Cablevision  Chairman]  Chuck Dolan at that point  probably  will dial
[President] Bob Wright at NBC and say, "Bob ..."

Q: Do you have another idea, Mario?

Gabelli:  Three  small-cap  stocks  that  derive  their  demand from the airline
business in some fashion. Either they sell components to Boeing or they sell and
service parts. The first one is Sequa, which sells components for engine repairs
and overhauls.  General Electric just bought two companies in the business,  one
of  which  was  Greenwich  Air  Services,  which  in turn  was  buying  UNC Inc.
AlliedSignal   just  bought  an   aircraft-parts   distribution   division  from
Fairchild's Banner Aerospace.  The company I like is Sequa.  Traded on the NYSE,
10.9 million shares out. The stock is 66.  [Chairman]  Norman  Alexander is over
80. The earnings for 1998 will be $4.75. They will go to $7.50 in '99. They will
be close to $10 in the year 2000.  The value of the business,  if Norman decides
not to wake up, or decides to sell-or to wake up and sell --

Q: You're looking for trouble again.

Gabelli:  -- he could  sell the  pieces,  based on  recent  transactions  -- and
applying  a lowly  multiple  of eight  times  EBITDA to  Chromalloy,  which is a
world-class  business -- for $200 a share. I think that $200 becomes $300 by the
year  2001.  So,  with the stock at 65, I have an  incredible  margin of safety,
assuming  Norman  Alexander  stays  the  course.  I mean,  he just  put  [Apollo
Advisors'  founding partner] Leon Black on the board, which is the first sign of
fresh air I have seen in the company.

Q: What kind of air? Leon Black?

Gabelli: Fresh.

Q: You've been inside too long.

Gabelli:  My second small-cap is SPS Technologies.  Twelve million shares; a $40
stock. NYSE; $480 million of equity; $100 million of debt.

Neff: Tell where it's headquartered.

Gabelli: Jenkintown, Pennsylvania.

Neff: Almost in Philadelphia.

Gabelli:  I was just  there.  Went  through  the  factory  about four weeks ago.
Charlie  Grigg came on board as the CEO three or four years  ago.  The  fastener
business is doing  extremely well. And they are creating a second window that is
growing  exponentially by consolidating the fragmented $2 billion  bonded-metals
and magnets business. They are buying up small companies, have made over a dozen
acquisitions.  Earnings should ramp up -- $3.10,  $3.60,  $4, $5. The company is
worth  $60 a share  today  and it  will be  worth  $100  in five  years.  It's a
spectacular  play.  Fairchild,  I won't go into  much.  The stock is around  20.
Another fastener company.  Jeffrey Steiner runs it. They just did an offering to
liquefy, through DLJ; 20 million shares out. They control Banner Aerospace.

Q: Another supplier to Boeing?

Gabelli: Yes, Boeing will produce 550 planes in 1998.

Q: Don't you think Boeing is vulnerable to a lot of cancellations out of Asia?

Gabelli:  Absolutely. There is going to be all sorts of that. But the age of the
aircraft,  the  fact  that  they  need  to  be  more  fuel-efficient,   or  more
noise-efficient,  and some growth around the world will keep Boeing working. The
problem  is the ramp rate goes to  550-600  planes a year -- then  flattens.  So
these companies, over the next two years, will have good earnings growth -- then
go flat in that part of the  business.  You can't  buy  these  stocks  for those
orders, because the market is already discounting the flattening.  You're buying
them  because  the  cash  flow  is  terrific  and  there  will  be  a  round  of
consolidations.  Fairchild  will  probably be taken over by Textron.  Or they'll
merge  with  SPS  Technologies.  Someone  has to  merge  with  somebody  in this
business.  There are too many companies.  Then, the financial  engineers will do
something.  In the case of SPS Technologies,  which is a nuts-and-bolts company,
Charlie Grigg is first-class. These three are small-cap stocks that are going to
be terrific in relation to value and in relation to earnings over the next 12-18
months.  I want to own them all -- as I do -- I want to own the whole  companies
for my clients.

Q: You may have to. Is that it?

Gabelli:  Rollins Inc. The stock is at 20; 33.4 million  shares.  Last year, the
stock was the same price, but they got $50 million more than I expected from the
sale of their burglar-alarm  business to Ameritech.  They got $200 million.  The
company is sitting on $300 million of gross cash, $250 million tax-paid.  That's
$8 a share. So you are paying $12 a share,  or $240 million,  for a $550 million
- -- in  revenues -- business  that is earning  about 5%, down from 15%.  Which is
Orkin. Orkin kills termites,  roaches. Pest control.  Within two years, I think,
Rollins sells Orkin at $30-$35.

   Another financial  engineering company is Gaylord  Entertainment,  which sold
its Country Music Television and its Nashville Network to Westinghouse Electric.
Shareholders got Westinghouse  stock, plus shares in this spun-off company.  One
of the last Morris trusts.  Gaylord is one of the three new companies in my Hall
of Shame this  year,  because of the way they  handled  the sale of their  cable
networks to Westinghouse. They had no upside protection. Westinghouse stock went
from 17 to 28 while the deal was pending,  and we were stuck at a $17 valuation.
It was a disgrace.  Still,  Gaylord today has 32 million shares. The stock sells
at 30 on the NYSE. That is a $1 billion market cap. It has a few hundred million
of debt.  For that you get a hotel that  everyone  wants to own -- 2,950  rooms,
$100  million of EBITDA,  about 88%  occupancy  last year,  but they added a new
wing.  It will go to about 95% occupancy  this year,  with an average daily room
rate of about $130.

Q: This is Opryland?

Gabelli: The hotel. It's in Nashville. That hotel, someone with a paper clip, or
a paired  REIT,  or some  desire to own it,  will pay $1  billion  for.  I think
[Hilton Hotels CEO Stephen] Bollenbach would buy it. The balance of the business
is probably  worth  another  $500  million.  The biggest  value in that is a CBS
station in Dallas, a stand-alone  station that they could probably sell for $350
million.  I also like it because of something  else:  Country-and-western  music
originates  in Nashville.  Everyone goes to the place that they own,  called the
Ryman Auditorium,  to perform. So if you are Garth Brooks, you go there to play.
It is like everyone coming to Barron's.

Q:  Thanks.

Gabelli:   You're   welcome.   In  three   years  they  will  be  the   foremost
country-and-western  music  company in the world.  But you don't pay for that in
Gaylord's stock.

Neff: Mario, I thought Opryland died. Can the hotel stand on its own?

Gabelli:  The amusement park itself, if Premier Parks were running it, or if you
and I were running it, could be  rejuvenated.  But Gaylord decided to contribute
that land to a mall  operator.  I thought  it was a  mistake.  
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                       10
<PAGE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
January 26, 1998             BARRON'S o Rountable '98
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
But they were not doing a good job of running the amusement park. They also have
some radio stations. There are a lot of assets.

Ziegler: What are they going to do with the land? Turn it into a shopping mall?

Gabelli:  Yes. They also own a stake in Bass Pro, the fishing-gear  outfit. They
own 10% of the Texas Rangers. There are a lot of assets there.

Q: You mentioned that Gaylord is in your "Hall of Shame." YouOd better explain.

Gabelli:  These are not short ideas.  My Hall of Shame is reserved for companies
with interesting  values -- but with managements who just feel like they own the
companies.  Who stand in the way of deals that would surface values, for reasons
of their  own.  Like  Norman  Alexander  at Sequa.  It's my  version  of tar and
feathers.

   Another  company in my Hall of Shame this year is  Pennzoil,  just because of
the way they totally  ignored  shareholders'  desire to get a high price for the
company. Flatly refused to consider Union Pacific Resources' bid.

Q: What's your third Hall of Shamer?

Gabelli: Reader's Digest Association,  just because of the way they are handling
this whole management  transition.  Lowering the options exercise price. But the
virtue of Reader's  Digest is that they have an ability to do order  fulfillment
on a global basis. The stock is at 23; there are 100 million shares. There is no
debt.  Earnings are hard to get a handle on. But their major asset is an ability
to  generate  lists  and  to  fulfill  the  still-embryonic  electronic-commerce
industry on a global basis. That has a value to large customers and companies --
an increasing  one, now that brands can be exploited via the Internet.  Reader's
Digest  today  has  about a $2.5  billion  market  cap.  Look at the size of the
mega-deals  today. We think it'll be taken over.  Another company -- this one is
not in my Hall of  Shame,  but it's one,  like  Reader's  Digest,  that has good
fulfillment capabilities -- is Lillian Vernon. She runs a nice little mail-order
operation. The people who are going to sell merchandise on the Internet will try
to migrate  -- and take over these  companies.  Plus,  there is a  consolidation
going on in the catalogue  industry.  This is one of the companies  that will be
taken over. The stock is at 16.

Q: What else?

Gabelli: Pepsi/Whitman -- the new company about to be created, effective January
30. Illinois  Central became Whitman Corp.  Whitman has three parts -- Hussmann,
Midas and Pepsi-Cola  General Bottlers.  The first two are about to be spun off.
The  part I want to talk  about  is what  will  be left in  Whitman,  the  Pepsi
bottler.  There are 102  million  shares.  The stock is trading  at 15-18,  on a
when-distributed  basis.  The new Whitman,  to me, is similar to what  Coca-Cola
Enterprises was when I found it back in the 1980s when it went public.  This may
well  become  [PepsiCo  CEO]  Roger  Enrico's  engine for  rejuvenating  Pepsi's
independent   bottling  system.   The  documents  are  out.  If  we  are  right,
Pepsi/Whitman  should earn about 70 cents a share in '98, marching up at about a
15%  compounded  growth rate.  Its cash flow will be fairly  significant.  Also,
Pepsi went to them and said,  "We want you to be the bottler in Poland.  We want
you to be the bottler in Russia."

Q: Do you buy Whitman now, or wait?

Gabelli:  You can buy Whitman today, for $25. It's about to be split into three.
For every share of Whitman,  you get a  half-share  of Hussmann.  Hussmann  will
eventually be sold. It is like Thermo King, a very  attractive  operation in the
refrigeration  business. For every share of Whitman you get one-sixth of a share
of Midas. And you get a share of Pepsi/Whitman.  It is probably extremely poorly
managed  today,  at the top. But the business  itself is terrific.  They are the
Pepsi bottler covering about 12% of the U.S., primarily around Chicago-Heartland
USA. This is a terrific vehicle for Roger Enrico.  They already own 20%. I think
it becomes the vehicle  that Pepsi does its bottling  acquisitions  through-much
the way Coca-Cola did it with CCE.

Neff: To the degree that Coca-Cola is essentially giving away carbonated colored
sugar water, doesn't it make it awfully tough for other bottlers?

Gabelli: The bottling business in the U.S. is very attractive,  very successful.
What it requires, however, is some skill economics, when you do the routes, when
you buy the vending machines --

Neff: Vending is good, but the rest-the supermarket price of soft drinks

MacAllaster: Soft-drink margins in the U.S. are much lower than anyplace else in
the world. Except maybe Canada.

Neff: Coke keeps going for market share. Are they going to stop doing that?

Gabelli:  If you want a  drop-dead  analogy,  all you have to do is read the CCE
prospectus. I am running out of time, so I can't do it for you.

   Three other names that will probably be taken over:  Modine  Manufacturing in
the radiator business;  30 million shares; a $34 stock. Great global company; $1
billion in revenues.  For the March '98 year,  they'll  earn about  $2.50.  That
should grow at 12% over the next five years.  We think the company  today,  in a
takeover, would be worth about $45. A great balance sheet. Great cash generator.
They will have $200 million in cash, no debt,  in a couple of years.  Five years
out, if you use a constant multiple of EBITDA, it should be worth about $65.

   Another  company  that  could go either  way -- become a  consolidator  or be
consolidated -- is an old favorite with a new management:  Echlin.  The stock is
35; there are 63 million shares. Fiscal year ends August 31. They will earn, for
the current year, about $2.35. You'll have about a 20% earnings growth rate over
the next three to five years in Echlin.

Q: They depend enormously on the weather.  This warm winter is not going to give
Echlin a very big year.  

Gabelli:  There are 200 million cars and trucks on the road in the U.S.  Another
400 million more on the road around the world. That's 600 million vehicles.  The
growth  rate for  vehicles  on the road in Europe is 3%-4%.  In the U.S.,  it is
about 2.2%, and in Latin America,  it is much higher.  In Asia, you can pick any
number you want.  Someone has to supply spare parts on an ongoing  basis for the
engines,  braking  systems,  safety  items.  This  company  is  emerging  as the
preeminent manufacturer, supplier and distributor of parts on a global basis for
the vehicle population.

Q: That has been the argument forever.

Gabelli: And there's new management.

Black:  But the gross margins have been coming down. The channel of distribution
has changed over the last few years in the business,  from the jobbers to direct
sales to the big  retailers  like the  AutoZones.  That has put the arm on these
people's gross margins. I have owned things like Standard Motor in the past. But
we are out of them  because the gross  margins  keep going down and down. I know
you said there is new  management,  but they have been  telling this story for a
while-we have called them.  And they've had 12 down quarters in a row.

Gabelli: Call them again. You're dated. Larry McCurdy just took over the helm of
the company.  There is some low-hanging  fruit. There will be changes in the way
they  manufacture.  The  distribution  channel is an issue -- but not a dominant
issue. It is the way you manufacture,  the way you distribute on a global basis.
Because  there are no  AutoZones in Europe or Latin  America.  Even in the U.S.,
Echlin is changing  its product mix.  They will get their  earnings up. You will
see eight straight up quarters.  You will have a stock that will either be taken
over or be in the mid-50s in two years.  That's not a lot of money, but it is up
50%; that's okay.

Thank you, Mario.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                       11
<PAGE>

Preferred Stock -- An Investment For The Future

      In the first  quarter  of 1997,  the  Board of  Directors  of The  Gabelli
Convertible  Securities  Fund  authorized  management to consider an offering of
preferred stock. On May 16, 1997, the Fund  successfully  completed its offering
of  cumulative  preferred  stock which was rated  'AAA' by Standard  and Poor's.
Shareholder  response has been positive and we  appreciate  the efforts of Smith
Barney and  Gabelli & Company,  Inc.,  the  underwriters,  and wish to thank and
welcome all those investors who participated.

      The Fund issued 1,200,000  Preferred Shares at $25 with an annual dividend
rate of $2.00 per  share  paying  quarterly  starting  in  September  1997.  The
Preferred  Shares are  trading on the New York Stock  Exchange  under the symbol
OGCV Pr" and closed at $26.375 on December 31, 1997.  We thought we would answer
some questions about preferred stock.

Q:  What is Preferred Stock?

      Preferred  stock is a form of equity  investment  which has certain rights
that differ from those of common stock.  In our case,  the  preferred  stock was
issued  at $25 per  share  with a fixed  dividend  rate of  $2.00.  The  Fund is
obligated  to  pay  this  dividend  to the  Preferred  Shareholders  before  any
dividends  are paid to the  holders  of common  shares.  Thereafter,  any return
earned in  excess  of this  dividend  rate  would  work to  benefit  the  Common
Shareholders.

Q:  How would Preferred Shares benefit Common Shareholders?

      Through  December 31, 1997, the  Convertible  Securities Fund has earned a
10.2%  average  annual  return.  The  only  obligation  that the Fund has to the
Preferred  Shareholders  is to pay the stated  dividend rate.  Given the current
market  environment,  we  considered  this to be an  ideal  opportunity  to take
advantage  of  relatively  low  long-term  interest  rates and to earn an excess
return for our Common Shareholders  consistent with our conservative  investment
approach. Any return earned in excess of the stated dividend rate, which is less
than  the  Fund's  average  annual   return,   would  directly   benefit  Common
Shareholders;  however,  any  shortfall  from the stated  rate would  impact the
Common Shareholders in the opposite fashion.  Therefore,  by taking advantage of
the  current   relatively  low  interest  rate  environment  and  achieving  our
investment objectives,  the Preferred Share issuance offers what we believe is a
conservative method of adding wealth for our Common Shareholders.

      Furthermore,  Common Shareholders stand to receive certain tax benefits as
a result of the Preferred Stock  offering.  Since taxable income is allocated to
the Preferred Shareholders before Common Shareholders,  taxable distributions to
Common  Shareholders  are  not  required  to the  extent  they  would  be if the
Preferred Shares were not outstanding.  Common Shareholders thus avoid having to
pay taxes on that  portion of taxable  income  that  previously  would have been
distributed  to  them.  By  deferring  these  taxable  distributions  and  taxes
associated  therewith,  the net asset  value of the common  shares are likely to
grow at a faster rate.

Q:  Why did the Fund consider Preferred Shares?

      Long-term  interest rates were at relatively low levels. The dividend rate
that  the  Fund is  required  to pay on the  Preferred  Shares  was  related  to
long-term rates. In this environment, we had a great opportunity to create value
by  earning a return in excess of the  Preferred's  dividend  rate over the long
term. Therefore,  we believe this represented an opportunistic time for the Fund
to take advantage of these low rates.

Q:  Will Gabelli Funds, Inc. be paid a management fee on the Preferred Capital?

      With the completion of the preferred  offering,  the Adviser has agreed to
waive the management fee on the incremental  assets if the net asset value total
return on the Fund does not  exceed the stated  dividend  rate on the  Preferred
Shares.

Q:  What were the offering costs involved with the Preferred Shares?

      Consistent with our conservative  approach,  the Fund issued the Preferred
Shares in a cost  efficient  manner at less than  $0.18 per share.  This  modest
investment  provided the underpinnings for successful  returns in the future and
incrementally  boosted  the  Fund's  twelve  month  returns  to  13.5%  with the
preferred offering versus 13.1% had the Preferred Shares not been issued.


                                       12
<PAGE>

The Importance of Interest Rates - A Brief Primer

      In the past we have  illustrated  the impact of  interest  rates on equity
valuations.  Now we  expand it to  include  convertible  securities  valuations.
According to A. Hartswell Woodson,  III, Vice President and Portfolio Manager of
the Gabelli Global Convertible Securities Fund:

      "Interest  rates  have been  steadily  declining.  The  current  declining
interest  rates have worked to enhance  both equity and  convertible  securities
valuations.  Borrowers  favor the current level of long-term  rates at 5.89% and
short-term  rates under  5.06%.  Owners of  businesses  prefer rates at the same
levels for a different  reason:  their  assets are worth more.  It remains to be
seen if these rates are at  equilibrium  with what the global economy will be in
1998."

Interest Rates 101

Let's spend a few moments looking at what happens when interest rates decline:

     o    Reduced Financial Costs. This helps highly leveraged companies by
          reducing interest outlays.

     o    Improved Demand. Lower rates help stimulate demand for traditional,
          interest sensitive economic sectors - for which residential housing is
          one key and visible component.

     o    Focus on Dividends. Clearly, higher-yielding stocks with reasonable
          growth prospects benefit from investors seeking higher yields than
          they are getting from savings accounts.

     o    Higher Asset Values.  Lower rates bolster the values of assets.

Let's take a look at one model that highlights this relationship.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             Asset Value Scenarios

                                      Case
                                      ----
                    A                   B                   C
Rates
- -----
                    $10             $10+$1/YR        $10 growing at 8%
                    ---             ---------        -----------------
10.0%              $3.86              $7.71                $8.32
8.0%               $4.63              $9.26               $10.00

Case A:   What is the present value of $10 ten years from now if interest rates
          (the discount factor) are ten percent; eight percent?
Case B:   What is the present value of ten dollars growing by one dollar per
          year?
Case C:   What is the present value of ten dollars growing at eight percent
          a year?
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Interest Rates - Values - Another Point of View

      Among the ways to value stocks is with a dividend  discount  model.  Here,
the key variable is the growth rate in dividends.
             
        P/E             b  
                  =  --------
        Multiple       k-g     Where P/E: price to earnings
                                       b: dividend payout rate
                                       k: required rate of return by an investor
                                       g: expected growth rate

     Briefly,  the model  values  stocks based on the  relationship  between two
crucial inputs: dividend growth and an investor's required rate of return.


                                       13
<PAGE>

      As interest rates decline,  the rate of return an investor  requires drops
as well,  because returns on alternative  investments  have fallen.  Holding all
else  constant,  a drop in the required  rate of return will  increase the value
today of a future stream of dividends.  Investors become willing to pay a higher
price relative to next year's earnings as interest rates drop.

      The same  methodology  holds for bonds too.  If interest  rates fall,  the
present  value of a future  stream  of coupon  payments  becomes  more  valuable
raising  the price of the bond.  Convertibles,  being a hybrid  security of both
equities and bonds, are a double beneficiary of declining interest rates.

Let's Talk Converts

      The following are  specifics on selected  holdings of our Fund.  Favorable
EBITDA  prospects do not necessarily  translate into higher prices,  but they do
express a positive trend which we believe will develop over time.

AirTouch  Communications  Inc. (6.00%, Cv. Pfd., Class B; 4.25%, Cv. Pfd., Class
C) is one of the premier players in global wireless communications. Operating in
attractive  cellular  markets  in the  U.S.  and  overseas  (including  Germany,
Portugal,  Sweden, Belgium, Italy, Spain, Japan and South Korea), the company is
well-positioned   to  participate   in  the  worldwide   expansion  of  wireless
communications.  Roughly  half of the  company's  current 8.5 million  worldwide
cellular  customers are located in the U.S. Annual growth is estimated at 30% to
40%.  AirTouch is in the process of strengthening  its cellular  position in the
U.S. with the acquisition of US West Media Group's domestic cellular  operations
and its stake in PrimeCo Personal Communications.

Atlantic  Richfield Co. (ARCO) ($2.80 Cv. Pfd.) is a diversified  energy company
operating  globally with substantial  interests in chemical  businesses  through
83%-owned  ARCO Chemical.  Atlantic  Richfield is  undertaking  major  worldwide
expansion, including ventures in China and Russia. Nearly 40% of ARCO's revenues
are  derived  from  oil,  gas and coal  resources,  another  40% from  refining,
marketing and transportation  and 20% from intermediate  chemicals and specialty
products.  Cash flow and earnings have  advanced as worldwide  demand for energy
and petrochemical  products increases.  ARCO's strong cash flow readily supports
the shares' above average 3.85% yield.

Chock Full o'Nuts Corp. (Sub. Deb. Cv., 8.00%, 9/15/06;  7.00%, 4/01/12) roasts,
packages and distributes  regular,  instant and specialty  coffees and teas. The
company also has a growing  institutional  distribution  business  that supplies
coffee and food products to  restaurants  and  businesses.  Chock Full o'Nuts is
developing a chain of retail drive-through  coffee outlets called Quikava.  Both
the 8% convertible  bonds,  due in 2006, and the 7%  convertible  bonds,  due in
2012,  offer  investors an attractive  way to  participate in Chock Full o'Nuts'
future.

Fieldcrest  Cannon  Inc.  (Sub.  Deb.  Cv.,  6.00%,  03/15/12)  is a  well-known
manufacturer of household  textile  products,  including  sheets,  pillow cases,
towels, bedspreads and blankets. Management has undertaken several restructuring
steps which are  anticipated  to result in  significant  increases  in operating
margins and net income.  We believe stable cotton prices,  higher mill activity,
lower  interest  expenses and an  improving  economic  environment  will sustain
Fieldcrest's  earnings recovery.  Pillowtex (PTX - $34.875 - NYSE) has agreed to
acquire  Fieldcrest  Cannon for cash and stock valued at roughly  $400  million.
Pillowtex makes bedding products under a number of private label and brand names
including  Ralph  Lauren and Disney,  so the  amalgamation  expands  Pillowtex's
product line from the bedroom to the bathroom.

HSN Inc. (Sub.  Deb. Cv.,  5.875%,  03/01/06) is the name for the parent company
comprised  of  Silver  King   Communications,   Home  Shopping  Network  and  SF
Broadcasting.  Silver  King  operates  12  wholly-owned  UHF  stations  and  one
satellite station through SKTV Inc. Home Shopping's major business is electronic
retailing.  The  six  SF  Broadcasting  stations,  four  VHF  stations  and  two
satellites  are 50%-owned  with Fox. The combined  companies are guided by Barry
Diller. HSNI is buying the television assets of Universal Studios from Seagram's
for $4.075 billion.  Under the proposal,  Universal (a subsidiary of the Seagram
Company)  receives a 45%  interest  in HSN and $1.2  billion  in cash.  HSN gets
control of the USA Network,  the Sci-Fi Channel and Universal's U.S.  television
production and distribution operations.  HSNI has also acquired a 50.1% stake in
Ticketmaster Group (TKTM - $23.00 - Nasdaq).


                                       14
<PAGE>

Sequa Corp. ($5.00 Cv. Pfd.) is an aerospace, chemical, machinery and automotive
product company.  Its diversified  businesses range from overhauling jet engines
to manufacturing specialty chemicals.  The Chromalloy division,  which generates
over $900  million in  revenue,  is the leader in the  repair,  replacement  and
overhaul of gas  turbine  engines.  Sequa has  launched a program to divest less
profitable operations, thereby unmasking this crown jewel.

Sprint Corp.  ($1.50 Cv. Pfd.,  Series 1; $1.50 Cv. Pfd.,  Series 2; 8.25%,  Cv.
Pfd.)  is the  third  largest  long  distance  carrier  and the  second  largest
independent  local telephone company in the U.S. Its cellular unit, 360 (degree)
Communications  Company,  was spun off in 1996.  Sprint  has  positioned  itself
globally through a joint venture with France Telecom and Deutsche Telekom, which
purchased a 20% stake in Sprint in January 1996 for $3.5  billion.  Sprint has a
promising  national  PCS and  wireless  joint  venture  with three  major  cable
operators:  Tele-Communications Inc., Comcast and Cox Communications.  FON faces
risks from  prospective new entrants in its long distance  business which may be
offset  by the PCS  venture  and its  own  pursuit  of the  $100  billion  local
telephone market.

Dividends

      The Fund  recently  distributed  a  dividend  of $0.60 per share to Common
Shareholders  on December 26,  1997.  For the twelve  months ended  December 31,
1997,  the Fund  distributed a total of $0.96 per share to Common  Shareholders.
Our Preferred  Shareholders  were paid a dividend of $0.50 per share on December
26,  1997.  For the year ended  December 31, 1997,  the  Preferred  Shareholders
received a total  distribution of $1.2278 per share. The next quarterly dividend
of $0.50  per  share for the  Preferred  Shareholders  will be paid on March 26,
1998.

No Commission Purchases

      When the  Convertible  Securities  Fund converted to closed-end  status on
March 31, 1995, we offered  shareholders the opportunity to sell their shares at
no commission for up to two years.  On March 31, 1997, this ability to sell your
convertible  shares at no  commission  expired.  However,  we have  extended for
another year our offer to  shareholders to buy shares through our Voluntary Cash
Purchase Plan at no commission.  This Plan is available every month.  Please see
the details of this Plan at the end of this report.

Internet

     You   can   now   visit   us  on   the   Internet.   Our   home   page   at
http://www.gabelli.com  contains  information  about Gabelli  Funds,  Inc.,  the
Gabelli Mutual Funds, IRAs, 401(k)s, quarterly reports, closing prices and other
current news. You can send us e-mail at [email protected].


                                       15
<PAGE>

In Conclusion

     1997 was yet another very good year for equity and  convertible  securities
investors.  If earnings expectations are realized, 1998 may be a reasonably good
year as well.  We do have  our  reservations  and are  mindful  that at  current
valuations,  stocks are well above the safety net. As always, we are focusing on
valueNsecurities  trading at a material  discount to their longer term intrinsic
value.  We believe this  discipline  will  effectively  preserve and enhance the
value of the assets you have entrusted to us.

                                   Sincerely,

                                   /s/ MARIO J. GABELLI
                                   ------------------------
                                   Mario J. Gabelli
                                   President and
                                   Chief Investment Officer

February 1, 1998

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                          Top Ten Convertible Holdings
                                December 31, 1997
                                -----------------

         Sprint                             Sequa Corporation             
         HSN, Inc.                          Atlantic Richfield            
         General Host Corp.                 Chock Full o'Nuts Corporation 
         Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc.            Thomas Nelson, Inc.           
         AirTouch Communications            Navistar International, Inc.  
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
NOTE: The views expressed in this report reflect those of the portfolio manager,
only through the end of the period of this report as stated on the cover. The
manager's views are subject to change at any time based on market and other
conditions.
   

                                       16
<PAGE>
   
The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.
Portfolio of Investments -- December 31, 1997
================================================================================
Principal                                                              Market
 Amount                                                     Cost       Value
- ---------                                                   ----       ------
            CONVERTIBLE CORPORATE BONDS - 21.09%
            AUTOMOTIVE: PARTS and ACCESSORIES - 0.26%
$ 500,000   Exide Corp. Sub. Deb. Cv.
             2.90%, 12/15/05 (b).......................   $ 323,089   $ 321,875
                                                          ---------   ---------
            AVIATION: PARTS and SERVICES - 0.20%
  242,000   Kaman Corp. Sub. Deb. Cv.
             6.00%, 03/15/12...........................     155,977     243,815
                                                          ---------   ---------
            BUILDING and CONSTRUCTION - 0.01%
   10,000   Holderbank Financiere
             Glarus AG Cv.
             4.50%, 08/11/08...........................      12,064      15,100
                                                          ---------   ---------
            BUSINESS SERVICES - 1.05%
  900,000   BBN Corp. Sub. Deb. Cv.
             6.00%, 04/01/12...........................     878,818     869,625
  850,000   Builders Transport Inc.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             6.50%, 05/01/11 +.........................     359,891     416,500
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                          1,238,709   1,286,125
                                                          ---------   ---------
            CABLE DISTRIBUTION - 0.23%
  400,000   Comcast Corp. Sub. Deb. Cv.
             1.125%, 04/15/07..........................     265,600     276,500
                                                          ---------   ---------
            COMPUTER SOFTWARE and SERVICES - 0.15%
   40,000   Sierra On-Line Inc. Sub.
             Deb. Cv.
             6.50%, 04/01/01 (b).......................      38,421     178,350
                                                          ---------   ---------
            CONSUMER PRODUCTS - 3.37% 
3,436,000   Fieldcrest Cannon Inc.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             6.00%, 03/15/12...........................   2,437,604   2,793,467
  564,000   Masco Corp. Sub. Deb. Cv.
             5.25%, 02/15/12...........................     392,782     665,520
  750,000   Standard Commercial Corp.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             7.25%, 03/31/07...........................     600,074     678,750
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                          3,430,460   4,137,737
                                                          ---------   ---------
            CONSUMER SERVICES - 2.61%
1,650,000   HSN Inc. Sub. Deb. Cv.
              5.875%, 03/01/06 (b).....................   1,650,000   3,188,625
                                                          ---------   ---------
            ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT - 0.39%
  400,000   Trans-Lux Corp. Sub. Deb. Cv.
             7.50%, 12/01/06...........................     400,000     477,500
                                                          ---------   ---------
            ENERGY - 1.82% 
1,100,000   Moran Energy Inc.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             8.75%, 01/15/08...........................     757,843   1,098,625
  600,000   Pennzoil Co. Sub. Deb. Cv.
             6.50%, 01/15/03...........................     600,000   1,126,500
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                          1,357.843   2,225,125
                                                          ---------   ---------
            ENTERTAINMENT - 0.69%
  600,000   Savoy Pictures
             Entertainment Inc.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             7.00%, 07/01/03...........................     536,614     561,000
  550,000   Time Warner Inc. LYONS Sr.
             Sub. Notes Cv.
             Zero Cpn., 06/22/13.......................     254,152     280,500
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                            790,766     841,500
                                                          ---------   ---------
            EQUIPMENT and SUPPLIES - 1.52% 
  635,000   Intermagnetics General Corp.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             5.75%, 09/15/03 (b).......................     633,701     536,575
1,250,000   Kollmorgen Corp. Sub.
             Deb. Cv.
             8.75%, 05/01/09...........................     955,092   1,326,563
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                          1,588,793   1,863,138
                                                          ---------   ---------
            FOOD and BEVERAGE - 1.82% 
  150,000   Boston Chicken Inc.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             4.50%, 02/01/04...........................     123,629      77,063
  100,000   Chiquita Brands
             International Inc. Cv.
             7.00%,  03/28/01..........................      95,083      95,250
            Chock Full o' Nuts Corp.:
1,000,000    Sub. Deb. Cv.
             7.00%, 04/01/12...........................     761,092   1,018,750
1,000,000    Sub. Deb. Cv.
             8.00%, 09/15/06...........................     989,225   1,035,000
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                          1,969,029   2,226,063
                                                          ---------   ---------
            HEALTH CARE - 0.25%
  350,000   Ivax Corp. Deb. Cv.
             6.50%, 11/15/01...........................     292,788     300,125
                                                          ---------   ---------
            HOTELS and GAMING - 0.63% 
  700,000   Hilton Hotels Corp.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             5.00%, 05/15/06...........................     700,000     766,500
                                                          ---------   ---------
            INDUSTRIAL - 0.01% 
   10,000   Robbins & Myers Inc.
             Deb. Cv.
             6.50%, 9/1/03.............................      15,375      15,275
                                                          ---------   ---------
            METALS and MINING - 0.26% 
  450,000   Coeur d'Alene Mines Corp.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             6.00%, 06/10/02...........................     418,565     315,000
                                                          ---------   ---------
            PAPER and FOREST  PRODUCTS - 0.19% 
  200,000   Riverwood  International Corp.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             6.75%, 09/15/03...........................     199,704     230,890
                                                          ---------   ---------

    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.


                                       17
<PAGE>

The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.
Portfolio of Investments (Continued) -- December 31, 1997
================================================================================
Principal                                                              Market
 Amount                                                     Cost       Value
- ---------                                                   ----       ------
            CONVERTIBLE CORPORATE BONDS (Continued)
            PUBLISHING - 2.27% 
$ 700,000   News America Holdings Inc.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             Zero Cpn., 03/31/02.......................   $ 506,917   $ 673,750
2,100,000   Thomas Nelson Inc. Sub.
             Deb. Cv.
             5.75%, 11/30/99 (b).......................   2,097,455   2,021,250
   50,000(a)United News & Media plc
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             6.125%, 12/03/03..........................      87,170      86,795
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                          2,691,542   2,781,795
                                                          ---------   ---------
            REAL ESTATE and DEVELOPMENT - 0.07%
  125,000   Rockefeller Center
             Properties Inc. Sub.
             Deb. Cv.
             Zero Cpn., 12/31/00.......................      87,051      90,625
                                                          ---------   ---------
            RETAIL - 2.78%
  146,000   Farah U.S.A. Inc.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             8.50%, 02/01/04...........................     133,311     116,800
  380,000   Food Lion Inc. Sub. Deb. Cv.
             5.00%, 06/01/03 (b).......................     377,437     422,750
2,801,000   General Host Corp.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             8.00%, 02/15/02...........................   2,753,684   2,808,002
  140,000   JumboSports Inc.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             4.25%, 11/01/00...........................     122,152      57,050
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                          3,386,584   3,404,602
                                                          ---------   ---------
            TELECOMMUNICATIONS - 0.08%
   10,000   Amnex Inc. Sub. Deb. Cv.
             8.50%, 09/25/02...........................       7,007       7,000
   50,000   Amnex Inc. Sub. Deb. Cv.
             8.50%, 09/25/02 (b).......................      50,000      35,000
   50,000   Telefonica Europe BV
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             2.00%, 07/15/02 (b).......................      50,000      53,625
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                            107,007      95,625
                                                          ---------   ---------
            TRANSPORTATION - 0.43% 
  465,000   Greyhound Lines Inc.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             8.50%, 03/31/07...........................     290,418     464,419
  150,000   WorldCorp Inc.
             Sub. Deb. Cv.
             7.00%, 05/15/04...........................     145,859      62,250
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                            436,277     526,669
                                                          ---------   ---------
            TOTAL CONVERTIBLE
             CORPORATE BONDS...........................  21,555,644  25,808,559
                                                         ----------  ----------
  Shares    
  ------    CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCKS - 15.20%
            AUTOMOBILE MANUFACTURERS - 0.64%
    5,000   Ford Motor Co. $4.20 Cv.
             Pfd. Ser. A...............................     451,100     785,000
                                                          ---------   ---------
            AVIATION: PARTS and SERVICES - 0.33%
    6,118   Kaman Corp. 6.50% Cv.
             Pfd. Ser. 2...............................     203,221     409,906
                                                          ---------   ---------
            BROADCASTING - 0.42% 
   10,500   Granite Broadcasting Corp.
             $1.938 Cv. Pfd............................     657,933     509,250
                                                          ---------   ---------
            CABLE - 1.01% 
    4,000   Cablevision Systems Corp.
             8.50% Cv. Pfd. Ser. I.....................      97,463     154,000
   17,500   US West Inc. 4.50%
             Cv. Pfd. Ser. D...........................     866,560   1,079,531
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                            964,023   1,233,531
                                                          ---------   ---------
            DIVERSIFIED INDUSTRIAL - 0.19%
    1,300   GATX Corp. $2.50 Cv. Pfd...................     116,515     234,000
                                                          ---------   ---------
            ENERGY - 1.89% 
    6,000   Atlantic Richfield Co.
             $2.80 Cv. Pfd.............................   1,600,963   2,250,000
    1,500   McDermott International Inc.
             $2.20 Cv. Pfd. A..........................      43,738      57,000
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                          1,644,701   2,307,000
                                                          ---------   ---------
            ENTERTAINMENT - 0.09%
    2,500   Metromedia International
             Group Inc. 7.25%  Cv. Pfd.................     122,650     113,125
                                                          ---------   ---------
            EQUIPMENT and SUPPLIES - 3.15%
   26,000   Navistar International Inc.
             $6.00 Cv. Pfd. Ser. G.....................   1,311,557   1,553,500
   24,000   Sequa Corp. $5.00 Cv. Pfd..................   1,832,242   2,295,000
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                          3,143,799   3,848,500
                                                          ---------   ---------
            HOTELS and GAMING - 0.13% 
    4,000   Station Casinos Inc.
             7.00% Cv. Pfd.............................     170,888     164,000
                                                          ---------   ---------
            PUBLISHING - 0.30%
    7,000   Golden Books Family
             Entertainment Inc.
             8.75% Cv. Pfd. (b)........................     350,000     371,000
                                                          ---------   ---------
            TELECOMMUNICATIONS - 5.17% 
   25,000   Citizens Utilities Co.
             5.00% Cv. Pfd.............................   1,172,625   1,193,750
            Sprint Corp.:
    3,000    $1.50 Cv. Pfd. Ser. 1.....................     301,100     532,500
    2,200    $1.50 Cv. Pfd. Ser. 2.....................     187,510     396,000
   82,500    8.25% Cv. Pfd.............................   3,101,119   3,691,875
    4,000   TCI Communications Inc.
             $2.125 Cv. Pfd. Ser. A ...................     177,465    256,500
    1,500   TCI Pacific
             Communications Inc.
             5.00% Cv. Pfd.............................     134,838     247,500
                                                          ---------   ---------
                                                          5,074,657   6,318,125
                                                          ---------   ---------

    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.


                                       18
<PAGE>

The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.
Portfolio of Investments (Continued) -- December 31, 1997
================================================================================
                                                                       Market
 Shares                                                     Cost       Value
- ---------                                                   ----       ------
            CONVERTIBLE CORPORATE BONDS (Continued)
            WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS - 1.88% 
            AirTouch Communications Inc.:
   13,000    4.25% Cv. Pfd. Cl. C......................  $  607,537  $  810,063
   42,000    6.00% Cv. Pfd. Cl. B......................   1,202,662   1,496,250
                                                         ----------  ----------
                                                          1,810,199   2,306,313
                                                         ----------  ----------
            TOTAL CONVERTIBLE
             PREFERRED STOCKS .........................  14,709,686  18,599,750
                                                         ----------  ----------
            COMMON STOCKS - 16.32%
            AVIATION:  PARTS and SERVICES - 0.09%
    6,500   Kaman Corp.................................      84,843     106,438
                                                         ----------  ----------
            BROADCASTING - 1.34%
   30,000   LIN Television Corp.+......................   1,624,150   1,635,000
                                                         ----------  ----------
            DIVERSIFIED INDUSTRIAL - 1.04%
   17,500   GATX Corp..................................     723,260   1,269,844
                                                         ----------  ----------
            ENERGY - 9.40%
    8,000   Exxon Corp.................................     237,758     489,500
    2,000   Santa Fe Energy
             Resources Inc.+...........................      14,959      22,500
  166,182   Tejas Gas Corp.+...........................  10,027,426  10,178,647
   15,000   Texaco Inc.................................     883,096     815,625
                                                         ----------  ----------
                                                         11,163,239  11,506,272
                                                         ----------  ----------
            ENTERTAINMENT - 0.09%
    2,000   BET Holdings Inc.+.........................     103,600     109,250
                                                         ----------  ----------
            EQUIPMENT and SUPPLIES - 0.25%
   50,000   Fedders Corp. Cl. A........................     310,916     306,250
                                                         ----------  ----------
            HEALTH CARE - 0.74%
   15,000   Genentech Inc.+............................     719,239     909,375
                                                         ----------  ----------
            MANUFACTURERS - 3.37%
  120,000   TriMas Corp................................   4,116,000   4,124,999
                                                         ----------  ----------
            REAL ESTATE - 0.00%
    2,000   Property Capital Trust.....................      13,225       2,250
                                                         ----------  ----------
             COMMON STOCKS ............................  18,858,472  19,969,678
                                                         ----------  ----------
Principal
 Amount
 ------
            CORPORATE BONDS - 0.08%
            ENTERTAINMENT - 0.08%
$ 100,000   Viacom Inc. 8.00%, 7/7/06..................      99,510     101,375
                                                         ----------  ----------
            TOTAL CORPORATE
             BONDS ....................................      99,510     101,375
                                                         ----------  ----------
            U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS - 48.73%
59,768,000  U.S. Treasury Bills
             4.99% to 5.27%, due
             01/02/98 to 02/05/98 (c)..................  59,649,414  59,642,711
                                                         ----------  ----------
            TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT
            OBLIGATIONS ...............................  59,649,414  59,642,711
                                                         ----------  ----------
            TOTAL INVESTMENTS -
             101.42% ..................................$114,872,726 124,122,073
                                                       ============ ===========
            Other Assets, Liabilities
              and Liquidation Value
              of Preferred Stock (Net) -
              (25.94)% ................................             (31,740,063)
                                                                    -----------
            NET ASSETS -
             COMMON STOCK - 75.48%
             (8,048,345 common
             shares outstanding).......................              92,382,010
                                                                    ===========
            NET ASSET VALUE PER
             COMMON SHARE .............................                  $11.48
                                                                         ======
           ----------------
            For Federal income tax purposes:
            Aggregate cost                                         $114,881,246
                                                                   ============
            Gross unrealized appreciation                          $ 10,018,831
            Gross unrealized depreciation                              (778,004)
                                                                   ------------
            Net unrealized appreciation                            $  9,240,827
                                                                   ============
- ----------------
(a)  Principal amount denoted in British Pounds.
(b)  Security exempt from registration  under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of
     1933, as amended.  These  securities may be resold in  transactions  exempt
     from registration,  normally to qualified institutional buyers. At December
     31,  1997,  Rule 144A  securities  amounted  to  $7,129,050  or 5.8% of net
     assets.
(c)  Yields represent the effective yield to maturity on the date of purchase.
+    Non-income producing security

    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.


                                       19
<PAGE>

                 The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.

Statement of Assets and Liabilities
December 31, 1997
================================================================================
Assets:
  Investments, at value
    (cost $114,872,726) ...................................       $ 124,122,073
  Foreign Cash (cost $2,673) ..............................               2,624
  Receivable for investments sold .........................             985,025
  Dividends and interest receivable .......................             505,013
                                                                  -------------
    Total Assets ..........................................         125,614,735
                                                                  -------------
Liabilities:
  Payable to Custodian ....................................              16,611
  Payable for investments purchased .......................             319,416
  Payable for dividends ...................................           2,393,629
  Payable for investment advisory fees ....................             158,278
  Other accrued expenses ..................................             344,791
                                                                  -------------
    Total Liabilities .....................................           3,232,725
                                                                  -------------
      Net Assets ..........................................       $ 122,382,010
                                                                  =============
      Net Asset Value per Common Share
      ($92,382,010 / 8,048,345 shares issued
      and outstanding; 100,000,000 shares
      authorized of $0.001 par value) .....................       $       11.48
                                                                  =============
Net Assets Consist of:
  Cumulative Preferred Stock (8.00%, $25
    liquidation value, $0.001 par value,
    2,000,000 shares authorized,
    1,200,000 shares issued and
    outstanding) redemption value .........................       $  30,000,000
  Common stock, at par value ..............................               8,048
  Additional paid-in capital ..............................          83,366,992
  Accumulated distributions in excess of net
    investment income .....................................            (152,426)
  Accumulated distributions in excess of net
    realized gain on investments ..........................             (89,888)
  Net unrealized appreciation on
    investments ...........................................           9,249,284
                                                                  -------------
      Net Assets ..........................................       $ 122,382,010
                                                                  =============

Statement of Operations
For the Year Ended December 31, 1997
================================================================================
Income:
  Dividends ...............................................        $  1,191,084
  Interest ................................................           4,277,973
                                                                   ------------
    Total investment income ...............................           5,469,057
                                                                   ------------
Expenses:
  Investment advisory fees ................................           1,117,059
  Shareholder services fees ...............................             114,301
  Shareholder report expenses .............................             112,108
  Other expenses ..........................................             214,681
                                                                   ------------
    Total expenses ........................................           1,558,149
  Less: Custodian fee credit ..............................             (11,469)
                                                                   ------------
    Total net expenses ....................................           1,546,680
                                                                   ------------
Net Investment Income .....................................           3,922,377
                                                                   ------------
Net Realized and Unrealized
  Gain on Investments:
  Net realized gain on investments ........................           5,481,192
  Net realized loss on futures ............................             (91,050)
  Net change in unrealized appreciation of
    investments ...........................................           4,526,049
                                                                   ------------
  Net realized and unrealized gain on
    investments ...........................................           9,916,191
                                                                   ------------
  Net increase in net assets resulting
    from operations .......................................        $ 13,838,568
                                                                   ============

Statement of Changes in Net Assets
================================================================================

                                                     Year Ended December 31,
                                                -------------------------------
                                                     1997             1996
                                                -------------    ------------
Operations:
   Net investment income ....................   $   3,922,377    $  3,950,672
   Net realized gain on investments .........       5,481,192       1,925,851
   Net realized gain (loss) on futures ......         (91,050)         57,335
   Net change in unrealized appreciation
    of investments ..........................       4,526,049         536,303
                                                -------------    ------------
     Net increase in net assets resulting
      from operations .......................      13,838,568       6,470,161
                                                -------------    ------------
Distributions to preferred shareholders from:
   Net investment income ....................        (623,599)           --
   Net realized gains .......................        (883,043)           --
                                                -------------    ------------
     Total distributions ....................      (1,506,642)           --
                                                -------------    ------------
Distributions to common shareholders from:
   Net investment income ....................      (3,206,103)     (3,950,672)
   Net realized gains .......................      (4,507,099)     (1,982,772)
   Distributions in excess of net
    investment income .......................            --           (14,871)
   Distributions in excess of net
    realized gains ..........................         (29,138)           --
                                                -------------    ------------
     Total distributions ....................      (7,742,340)     (5,948,315)
                                                -------------    ------------
Share Transactions - net: ...................        (459,867)           --
                                                -------------    ------------
Net proceeds from the issuance of
 preferred stock: ...........................      28,593,000            --
                                                -------------    ------------
   Net increase in net assets ...............      32,722,719         521,846
Net Assets
   Beginning of Period ......................      89,659,291      89,137,445
                                                -------------    ------------
   End of Period ............................   $ 122,382,010    $ 89,659,291
                                                =============    ============

    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.


                                       20
<PAGE>

                  The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.

                          Notes to Financial Statements

    1. Significant Accounting Policies. The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund,
Inc.  (the "Fund") is a closed-end  diversified  management  investment  company
whose objective is to seek a high level of total return through a combination of
current income and capital appreciation by investing in convertible  securities.
The Corporation was incorporated in Maryland on December 19, 1988 as an open-end
diversified  management  investment company and commenced  operations on July 3,
1989. The Board of Directors, upon approval at a special meeting of shareholders
held on  February  17,  1995,  voted to approve  the  conversion  of the Fund to
closed-end  status,  effective  March 31,  1995.  The  preparation  of financial
statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting  principles requires
management to make estimates and  assumptions  that affect the reported  amounts
and  disclosures in the financial  statements.  Actual results could differ from
those estimates.  The following is a summary of significant  accounting policies
followed by the Fund in the preparation of its financial statements.

    Security  Valuation.  Portfolio  securities listed or traded on a nationally
recognized securities exchange, quoted by the National Association of Securities
Dealers Automated Quotations, Inc. ("Nasdaq") or traded on foreign exchanges are
valued at the last sale price on that exchange (if there were no sales that day,
the  security is valued at the average of the bid and asked  prices).  All other
portfolio  securities for which  over-the-counter  market quotations are readily
available  are valued at the latest  average of the bid and asked  prices.  When
market quotations are not readily available,  portfolio securities are valued at
the fair value as determined in good faith under  procedures  established by and
under the general  supervision of the Corporation's  Directors.  Short-term debt
securities with remaining  maturities of 60 days or less are valued at amortized
cost, unless the Directors  determine such does not reflect the securities' fair
value,  in which  case  these  securities  will be valued at their fair value as
determined  by the  Directors.  Options are valued at the last sale price on the
exchange on which they are listed.  If no sales of such options have taken place
that day,  they will be valued at the mean between  their  closing bid and asked
prices.

    Foreign Currency. The books and records of the Fund are maintained in United
States (U.S.)  dollars.  Foreign  currencies,  investments  and other assets and
liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rates prevailing at
the end of the period, and purchases and sales of investment securities,  income
and  expenses  are  translated  on the  respective  dates of such  transactions.
Unrealized  gains or losses  which  result from  changes in the value of foreign
currencies   and  net  other   assets   have   been   included   in   unrealized
appreciation/depreciation   on   investments.   Realized  gains  and  losses  on
investments  include  foreign  currency  gains and losses between trade date and
settlement  date  on  investment  securities   transactions,   foreign  currency
transactions and the difference between the amounts of interest,  dividends, and
expenses  originally  recorded on the books of the Fund and the amounts actually
received or paid.

    The Fund  does  not  isolate  that  portion  of the  results  of  operations
resulting  from  changes  in  foreign  exchange  rates on  investments  from the
fluctuation  arising  from changes in market  prices of  securities  held.  Such
fluctuations  are included with the net realized and unrealized  gain or loss on
investments.

    Futures Contracts.  The Fund may engage in futures contracts for the purpose
of hedging against  changes in the value of its portfolio  securities and in the
value of  securities  it  intends  to  purchase.  Upon  entering  into a futures
contract,  the Fund is required to deposit  with the broker an amount of cash or
cash equivalents equal to a certain  percentage of the contract amount.  This is
known as the "initial margin". Subsequent payments ("variation margin") are made
or  received by the Fund each day,  depending  on the daily  fluctuation  of the
value of the  contract.  The daily  changes  in the  contract  are  recorded  as
unrealized gains or losses. The Fund recognizes a realized gain or loss when the
contract  is  closed.  As of  December  31,  1997,  there  were no open  futures
contracts.

    There are several risks in connection with the use of futures contracts as a
hedging device. The change in value of futures contracts  primarily  corresponds
with the value of their underlying instruments, which may not correlate with the
change in value of the hedged investments.  In addition,  there is the risk that
the Fund may not be able to  enter  into a  closing  transaction  because  of an
illiquid secondary market.

    Forward Foreign Currency  Contracts.  The Fund may engage in forward foreign
exchange contracts for hedging a specific transaction with respect to either the
currency in which the  transaction is denominated or another  currency as deemed
appropriate by the Adviser. Forward foreign currency contracts are valued at the
forward  rate and are  marked-to-market  daily.  The  change in market  value is
recorded by the Fund as an unrealized gain or loss. When the contract is closed,
the Fund  records a realized  gain or loss equal to the  difference  between the
value of the contract at the time it was opened and the value at the time it was
closed.

    The  use  of  forward   foreign   currency   contracts  does  not  eliminate
fluctuations in the underlying prices of the Fund's portfolio securities, but it
does  establish a rate of exchange that can be achieved in the future.  Although
forward  foreign  currency  contracts limit the risk of loss due to a decline in
the value of the hedged currency,  they also limit any potential gain that might
result should the value of the currency increase. In addition, the Fund could be
exposed to risks if the  counterparties  to the contracts are unable to meet the
terms of their contracts.

    At December 31, 1997, the Fund held no forward foreign currency contracts.

    Short  Sales.  The Fund is  authorized  to  engage in  short-selling,  which
obligates the Fund to replace the security  borrowed by purchasing  the security
at the current market value sometime in the future.  The Fund would incur a loss
if the price of the  


                                       21
<PAGE>

                  The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.

                    Notes to Financial Statements (Continued)

security  increases between the date of the short sale and the date on which the
Fund replaces the borrowed security.  The Fund would realize a gain if the price
of the  security  declines  between  those  dates.  Until the Fund  replaces the
borrowed security,  the Fund will maintain a segregated account with cash and/or
U.S.  Government  securities  sufficient to cover its short  position on a daily
basis. At December 31, 1997, there were no short positions.

    Security  Transactions  and Investment  Income.  Security  transactions  are
accounted  for on the trade  dates with  realized  gain and loss on  investments
determined by using specific  identification as the cost method. Interest income
(including  amortization  of premium and  accretion  of discount) is recorded as
earned.   Dividend  income  and  dividend  and  capital  gains  distribution  to
shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

    Dividends and Distributions to Shareholders.  Dividends and distributions to
shareholders  are recorded on the ex-dividend  date.  Income  distributions  and
capital  gain  distributions  are  determined  in  accordance  with  income  tax
regulations  which may differ from  generally  accepted  accounting  principles.
These differences are primarily due to differing  treatments of income and gains
on  various  investment  securities  held by the Fund,  timing  differences  and
differing  characterization of distributions made by the Fund.  Distributions to
shareholders of Cummulative Preferred Stock are accrued on a daily basis and are
determined as described in Note 2.

    As of December 31, 1997, the following  reclassifications  have been made to
(increase) decrease the following accounts:

            Accumulated Distributions     Accumulated Distributions   
               in Excess of Net           in Excess of Net Realized
               Investment Income             Gain on Investments
            -------------------------     -------------------------
                    $(3,280)                        $3,280

    Provision for Income  Taxes.  The Fund has qualified and intends to continue
to qualify as a regulated  investment company under Subchapter M of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.  As a result,  no Federal income tax provision
is required.

    2. Capital.  The articles of incorporation,  dated December 19, 1988, permit
the Fund to issue  100,000,000  shares (par value  $0.001) of common  stock.  In
addition, the Fund has been authorized to issue up to 2,000,000 shares of $0.001
par value 8%  Cumulative  Preferred  Stock.  On May 15, 1997,  the Fund received
proceeds of  $28,593,000  (net of offering costs and  underwriting  discounts of
$1,407,000) from the public offering of 1,200,000 shares of Cumulative Preferred
Stock. The Cumulative  Preferred Stock is senior to the Common Stock and results
in the  financial  leveraging  of the Common  Stock.  Such  leveraging  tends to
magnify both the risks and  opportunities to Common  Shareholders.  Dividends on
shares of the Cumulative Preferred Stock are cumulative. The Fund is required to
meet  certain  asset  coverage  tests with respect to the  Cumulative  Preferred
Stock.  If the Fund fails to meet these  requirements  and does not correct such
failure,  the Fund may be required to redeem, in part or in full, the Cumulative
Preferred  Stock at a redemption  price of $25.00 per share plus an amount equal
to the accumulated and unpaid  dividends  whether or not declared on such shares
in order to meet these requirements. Additionally, failure to meet the foregoing
asset  requirements could restrict the Fund's ability to pay dividends to Common
Shareholders  and could lead to sales of  portfolio  securities  at  inopportune
times.  The Preferred Stock is callable at the redemption price at the option of
the Fund after May 15, 2002. At December 31, 1997,  the 1,200,000  shares of the
8.00% Cumulative  Preferred Stock outstanding accrued dividends in the amount of
$32,877. The income received on the Fund's assets may vary in a manner unrelated
to the fixed rate, which could have either a beneficial or detrimental impact on
net investment income and gains available to Common Shareholders.

    The Fund shall not declare  dividends or make other  distributions on shares
of common stock or purchase  any such shares if at the time of the  declaration,
distribution  or  purchase,  asset  coverage  with  respect  to the  outstanding
Preferred Stock would be less than 200%.

    The holders of Preferred Stock have voting rights equivalent to those of the
holders of common stock (one vote per share) and will vote together with holders
of shares of common stock as a single class. In addition, the Investment Company
Act of 1940  requires  that along with  approval of the holders of a majority of
any outstanding preferred shares, voting separately as a class would be required
to (a)  adopt  any  plan of  reorganization  that  would  adversely  affect  the
Preferred Stock,  and (b) take any action requiring a vote of security  holders,
including,  among other  things,  changes in the Fund's  subclassification  as a
closed-end   investment  company  or  changes  in  its  fundamental   investment
restrictions.

    The Adviser has been  authorized  to  repurchase on behalf of the Fund up to
250,000  shares of the Fund in the open market,  whenever the shares are trading
at a discount to net asset value of ten per cent or more. During the fiscal year
ended December 31, 1997 the Fund repurchased 44,600 shares at a cost of $459,866
and at an average discount of 13.3%.

    3. Investment  Advisory  Agreement.  The Fund has entered into an investment
advisory  agreement (the "Advisory  Agreement")  with the Adviser which provides
that the Fund will pay the Adviser a fee,  computed  daily and paid monthly,  at
the annual rate of 1.00% of the value of the Fund's average daily net assets. In
accordance  with the  Advisory  Agreement,  the  Adviser  provides a  continuous
investment program for the Fund's portfolio,  oversees the administration of all
aspects of the Fund's  business and affairs,  and pays the  compensation  of all
Officers and Directors of the Fund who are its affiliates.


                                       22
<PAGE>

                  The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.

                    Notes to Financial Statements (Continued)

    The Adviser has agreed to reduce the management fee on the  incremental  net
assets  attributable to the liquidation value of the Cumulative  Preferred Stock
if the total net asset value return of the common shares of the Fund,  including
distributions  and the  advisory fee subject to  reduction,  does not exceed the
stated dividend rate of the Cumulative  Preferred  Stock.  During the period the
Preferred Stock was  outstanding,  the Fund achieved a total return in excess of
the pro rated stated dividend rate and no reduction was required.

    4.  Portfolio  Securities.  Purchases and sales of  securities  for the year
ended  December  31,  1997,   other  than  short-term   securities,   aggregated
$154,716,960 and $158,690,136, respectively.

    5. Transactions with Affiliates.  The Fund paid brokerage commissions during
the year ended  December  31,  1997 of $60,110  to Gabelli & Company,  Inc.,  an
affiliate  of  the  adviser.  Gabelli  &  Company  acted  as  co-manager  in the
underwriting  of the Preferred  Stock of the Fund.  In such  capacity  Gabelli &
Company  received  underwriting  fees  and  sales  concessions  before  expenses
totaling $77,900.


                                       23
<PAGE>

                  The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.
                              Financial Highlights

Selected data for a share of common stock outstanding throughout each period:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                             Year Ended December 31,
                                                            ---------------------------------------------------------
                                                               1997        1996         1995        1994       1993
                                                            --------     -------      -------     --------   --------
<S>                                                         <C>          <C>          <C>         <C>        <C>     
Operating Performance:
   Net asset value, beginning of year .................     $  11.08     $ 11.01      $ 10.60     $  11.52   $  11.45
                                                            --------     -------      -------     --------   --------
   Net investment income ..............................         0.49        0.49         0.53         0.69       0.76
   Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)
    on securities .....................................         1.23        0.31         1.03        (0.71)      0.74
                                                            --------     -------      -------     --------   --------
   Total from investment operations ...................         1.72        0.80         1.56        (0.02)      1.50
                                                            --------     -------      -------     --------   --------
Increase in net assets from Fund share 
   transactions .......................................         0.01          --           --           --         --
                                                            --------     -------      -------     --------   --------
Offering expenses charged to additional 
  paid-in-capital .....................................        (0.18)         --           --           --         --
                                                            --------     -------      -------     --------   --------
Distributions:
   Preferred Shares
   Distributions from net investment income ...........        (0.08)         --           --           --         --
   Distributions from net realized gain 
     on investments ...................................        (0.11)         --           --           --         --
   Common Shares
   Distributions from net investment income ...........        (0.40)      (0.49)       (0.53)       (0.69)     (0.76)
   Distributions from net realized gain 
     on investments ...................................        (0.56)      (0.24)       (0.56)       (0.21)     (0.67)
   Distributions in excess of net 
     investment income ................................           --          --        (0.02)          --         --
   Distributions in excess of net 
     realized gains ...................................           --          --        (0.01)          --         --
   Distributions from paid-in-capital .................           --          --        (0.03)          --         --
                                                            --------     -------      -------     --------   --------
   Total distributions ................................        (1.15)      (0.73)       (1.15)       (0.90)     (1.43)
                                                            --------     -------      -------     --------   --------
   Net asset value end of year ........................     $  11.48     $ 11.08      $ 11.01     $  10.60   $  11.52
                                                            ========     =======      =======     ========   ========
   Market value, end of period ........................     $  10.31     $  9.25      $ 10.75           --         --
                                                            ========     =======      =======     ========   ========
   Total Net Asset Value Return +(a) ..................         13.5%        8.4%        15.0%        (0.2)%     13.1%
   Total Investment Return +(b) .......................         22.2%       (7.3)%       12.3%          --         --
Ratios to average net assets/supplemental data:
   Net Assets, end of period (in 000's) ...............     $122,382     $89,659      $89,137     $112,090   $108,674
   Net Assets attributable to common shares, 
     end of period (in 000's) .........................     $ 92,382     $89,659      $89,137     $112,090   $108,674
   Ratio of operating expenses to average net
     assets attributable to common shares(c)(d) .......         1.68%       1.45%        1.56%        1.31%      1.38%
   Ratio of net investment income to average 
     net assets .......................................         4.23%       4.33%        4.60%        4.77%      4.58%
   Portfolio Turnover Rate ............................          243%        114%         140%          67%        45%
   Average Commission Rate (e) ........................     $ 0.0279     $0.0423           --           --         --
   Preferred Stock:
   Total shares outstanding (in 000's) ................        1,200          --           --           --         --
   Asset coverage per share ...........................          408%         --           --           --         --
   Liquidation preference per share ...................     $  25.00          --           --           --         --
   Average market value per share (f) .................     $  25.69          --           --           --         --
</TABLE>
- ----------
+    Total return  represents  aggregate  total return of a hypothetical  $1,000
     investment at the beginning of the period and sold at the end of the period
     including reinvestment of dividends and distributions.
(a)  Based on net asset value per share
(b)  Based on net asset  value per share  through  March 31,  1995,  the date of
     conversion of the Fund to closed-end status, and market value thereafter.
(c)  The ratio of  operating  expenses  to average  net assets  attributable  to
     common  shares  during the fiscal year ended  December 31, 1995  includes a
     current  period  expense  associated  with  the  conversion  of the Fund to
     closed-end status.  Without the conversion  expense,  this ratio would have
     been  1.28%.  The  ratio  of  operating  expenses  to  average  net  assets
     attributable  to common shares for the fiscal year ended  December 31, 1997
     does not include a reduction of expenses for  custodian fee credits on cash
     balances maintained with the custodian. Including the custodian fee credit,
     the ratio of  operating  expenses  to average  net assets  attributable  to
     common shares for the year would have been 1.67%.
(d)  For the  fiscal  year  ended  December  31,  1997,  the ratio of  operating
     expenses to average net assets including  assets  attributable to preferred
     shares was 1.39%.
(e)  For fiscal years  beginning on or after September 1, 1995, the SEC requires
     the Fund to  disclose  the  average  commission  rate  paid per  share  for
     purchases and sales of investment securities.
(f)  Based on weekly prices.

    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.


                                       24
<PAGE>

Report of Independent Accountants
================================================================================

To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of
The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.

    In our  opinion,  the  accompanying  statement  of assets  and  liabilities,
including the portfolio of investments, and the related statements of operations
and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all
material respects,  the financial position of The Gabelli Convertible Securities
Fund,  Inc. (the "Fund") at December 31, 1997, the results of its operations for
the year then ended,  the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in
the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the five years in
the  period  then  ended,  in  conformity  with  generally  accepted  accounting
principles.  These  financial  statements  and financial  highlights  (hereafter
referred to as  "financial  statements")  are the  responsibility  of the Fund's
management;  our  responsibility  is to express  an  opinion on these  financial
statements  based on our  audits.  We  conducted  our audits of these  financial
statements  in accordance  with  generally  accepted  auditing  standards  which
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable  assurance about
whether the financial  statements  are free of material  misstatement.  An audit
includes  examining,  on a test  basis,  evidence  supporting  the  amounts  and
disclosures in the financial  statements,  assessing the  accounting  principles
used and  significant  estimates made by management,  and evaluating the overall
financial  statement  presentation.  We believe that our audits,  which included
confirmation  of  securities  at December  31, 1997 by  correspondence  with the
custodian and brokers and the  application  of alternative  auditing  procedures
where  confirmations from brokers were not received,  provide a reasonable basis
for the opinion expressed above.

PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP

1177 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York
February 20, 1998


                                       25
<PAGE>

                  The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.

                   FEDERAL INCOME TAX INFORMATION (Unaudited)
                               Calendar Year 1997

Cash Dividends and Distributions
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              Total Amount       Ordinary          Long-Term        Dividend
         Payable            Record                Paid          Investment          Capital       Reinvestment
          Date               Date               per Share         Income             Gains            Price
          ----               ----               --------          ------            ------            -----
Common Shares
         <S>                <C>                 <C>               <C>              <C>               <C>       
         03/27/97           03/20/97            $0.1200           $0.1200          $0.0000           $9.6250
         06/27/97           06/20/97             0.1200            0.1200           0.0000            9.9626
         09/26/97           09/17/97             0.1200            0.1200           0.0000           10.4419
         12/26/97           12/17/97             0.6000            0.2654           0.3346           10.4892
                                                -------           -------          -------
         Total Common Stock                     $0.9600           $0.6254          $0.3346
                                                =======           =======          =======
Preferred Shares
         09/26/97           09/19/97            $0.7278           $0.7278          $0.0000
         12/26/97           12/18/97             0.5000            0.0730           0.4270
                                                -------           -------          -------
         Total Preferred Stock                  $1.2278           $0.8008          $0.4270
                                                =======           =======          =======
</TABLE>

    A Form  1099-DIV  has been  mailed to all  shareholders  of  record  for the
distributions  mentioned above, setting forth specific amounts to be included in
the 1997 tax  returns.  Ordinary  income  distributions  include net  investment
income and realized net short-term  capital  gains.  The percentage of Long-Term
Capital Gains which are subject to the maximum 28% rate (15% for  individuals in
the 15% tax bracket) was 34.90%.

Return of Capital

    The amount received as a non-taxable (return of capital) distribution should
be applied to reduce the tax cost of shares.  This amount will be  reflected  on
Form 1099-DIV.  If the amount of the non-taxable portion exceeds your tax basis,
the excess will be taxable as a capital gain.

Corporate Dividends Received Deduction and U.S. Treasury Securities Income

    The Fund paid to common  shareholders  ordinary income  dividends of $0.1200
per share on March 27, 1997,  June 27, 1997,  September 26, 1997 and $0.2654 per
share on December 26, 1997.  The Fund paid to  preferred  shareholders  ordinary
income  dividends  of $0.7278  per share on  September  26, 1997 and $0.0730 per
share on December 26, 1997. For 1997,  18.78% of the ordinary  income  dividends
qualifies for the dividend  received  deduction  available to corporations.  The
percentage  of ordinary  income  dividends  paid by the Fund during 1997 derived
from U.S. Treasury Securities was 30.24%.

                         HISTORICAL DISTRIBUTION SUMMARY
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   Short-Term    Long-Term                                    Adjustment
         Annual                     Investment       Capital      Capital     Return of          Total            to
         Summary                     Income(a)      Gains(a)       Gains     Capital(b)      Distributions    Cost Basis
        ---------                    --------       --------      ------      ---------       -----------      ---------
<S>                                  <C>             <C>          <C>           <C>             <C>             <C>  
Common Shares
1997 .........................       $0.3969         $0.2285      $0.3346          --           $0.9600            --
1996 .........................        0.4900          0.1416       0.1034          --            0.7350            --
1995 .........................        0.5574          0.2041       0.3595       0.0290           1.1500         0.0290-
1994 .........................        0.5730          0.1150       0.2120          --            0.9000            --
1993 .........................        0.5610          0.2000       0.6640          --            1.4250            --
1992 .........................        0.6540          0.0900       0.1320          --            0.8760            --
1991 .........................        0.7060          0.1120       0.0470          --            0.8650            --
1990 .........................        0.6900             --           --           --            0.6900            --
1989 .........................        0.1150             --           --           --            0.1150            --

Preferred Shares
1997 .........................       $0.5082         $0.2926      $0.4270          --           $1.2278            --
</TABLE>
- ----------
(a)  Taxable as ordinary income for Federal tax purposes.
(b)  Non-taxable.
- -    Decrease in cost basis.


                                       26
<PAGE>

        AUTOMATIC DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT AND VOLUNTARY CASH PURCHASE PLAN

Enrollment in the Plan

    It  is  the  Policy  of  The  Gabelli  Convertible   Securities  Fund,  Inc.
("Convertible  Securities  Fund")  to  automatically  reinvest  dividends.  As a
"registered"   shareholder  you  automatically   become  a  participant  in  the
Convertible Securities Fund's Automatic Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the "Plan").
The  Plan  authorizes  the  Convertible  Securities  Fund  to  issue  shares  to
participants upon an income dividend or a capital gains distribution  regardless
of whether the shares are trading at a discount or a premium to net asset value.
All distributions to shareholders whose shares are registered in their own names
will be automatically  reinvested  pursuant to the Plan in additional  shares of
the  Convertible  Securities  Fund.  Plan  participants  may  send  their  stock
certificates to State Street Bank and Trust Company ("State  Street") to be held
in their  dividend  reinvestment  account.  Registered  shareholders  wishing to
receive their distribution in cash must submit this request in writing to:

                  The Gabelli Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.
                     c/o State Street Bank and Trust Company
                                  P.O. Box 8200
                              Boston, MA 02266-8200

    Shareholders  requesting  this cash election must include the  shareholder's
name and  address as they  appear on the share  certificate.  Shareholders  with
additional questions regarding the Plan or requesting a copy of the terms of the
Plan may contact State Street at 1 (800) 336-6983.

    Shareholders  wishing to  liquidate  reinvested  shares held at State Street
Bank must do so in writing or by  telephone.  Please  submit your request to the
above mentioned address or telephone number.  Include in your request your name,
address  and  account  number.  The  cost  to  liquidate  shares  is  $2.50  per
transaction as well as the brokerage commission incurred.  Brokerage charges are
expected to be less than the usual brokerage charge for such transactions.

    If your shares are held in the name of a broker, bank or nominee, you should
contact such institution.  If such institution is not participating in the Plan,
your account will be credited with a cash  dividend.  In order to participate in
the Plan through  such  institution,  it may be  necessary  for you to have your
shares  taken out of  "street  name" and  re-registered  in your own name.  Once
registered in your own name your  dividends  will be  automatically  reinvested.
Certain brokers participate in the Plan.  Shareholders holding shares in "street
name"  at   participating   institutions   will  have  dividends   automatically
reinvested.  Shareholders  wishing  a cash  dividend  at such  institution  must
contact their broker to make this change.

    The number of shares of Common Stock distributed to participants in the Plan
in lieu of cash dividends is determined in the following manner. Under the Plan,
whenever the market price of the Convertible  Securities  Fund's Common Stock is
equal to or exceeds net asset  value at the time shares are valued for  purposes
of determining the number of shares  equivalent to the cash dividends or capital
gains distribution, participants are issued shares of Common Stock valued at the
greater of (i) the net asset value as most  recently  determined  or (ii) 95% of
the then current market price of the Convertible Securities Fund's Common Stock.
The valuation date is the dividend or distribution payment date or, if that date
is not a New York Stock  Exchange  trading day, the next trading day. If the net
asset  value of the Common  Stock at the time of  valuation  exceeds  the market
price of the Common Stock, participants will receive shares from the Convertible
Securities  Fund valued at market  price.  If the  Convertible  Securities  Fund
should  declare a dividend or capital gains  distribution  payable only in cash,
State Street will buy Common Stock in the open market,  or on the New York Stock
Exchange or elsewhere, for the participants' accounts,  except that State Street
will  endeavor  to  terminate  purchases  in  the  open  market  and  cause  the
Convertible Securities Fund to issue shares at net asset value if, following the
commencement of such purchases, the market value of the Common Stock exceeds the
then current net asset value.

    The automatic reinvestment of dividends and capital gains distributions will
not  relieve  participants  of any  income  tax  which  may be  payable  on such
distributions.  A participant in the Plan will be treated for Federal income tax
purposes  as  having  received,  on a  dividend  payment  date,  a  dividend  or
distribution in an amount equal to the cash the participant  could have received
instead of shares.

    The Convertible Securities Fund reserves the right to amend or terminate the
Plan as  applied  to any  voluntary  cash  payments  made  and any  dividend  or
distribution paid subsequent to written notice of the change sent to the members
of the  Plan at least 90 days  before  the  record  date  for such  dividend  or
distribution.  The Plan also may be amended or  terminated by State Street on at
least 90 days' written notice to participants in the Plan.


                                       27
<PAGE>

Voluntary Cash Purchase Plan

    The Voluntary Cash Purchase Plan is yet another vehicle for our shareholders
to increase their  investment in the  Convertible  Securities  Fund. In order to
participate in the Voluntary Cash Purchase  Plan,  shareholders  must have their
shares registered in their own name.

    Participants  in the Voluntary  Cash Purchase Plan have the option of making
additional  cash  payments to State Street for  investments  in the  Convertible
Securities Fund shares at the then current market price.  Shareholders  may send
an amount  from $250 to $10,000.  State  Street will use these funds to purchase
shares in the open market on or about the 15th of each month.  State Street will
charge each  shareholder who  participates  $0.75,  plus a pro rata share of the
brokerage  commissions.  Brokerage charges for such purchases are expected to be
less than the usual brokerage charge for such transactions.  However, the Fund's
Adviser, Gabelli Funds, Inc., has arranged that these purchases will be executed
at no commission  through  December 31, 1998. It is suggested that any voluntary
cash  payments be sent to State  Street Bank and Trust  Company,  P.O. Box 8200,
Boston,   MA   02266-8200   such  that  State  Street   receives  such  payments
approximately 10 days before the 15th of the month.  Funds not received at least
five  days  before  the  investment  date  shall be held for  investment  in the
following month. A payment may be withdrawn without charge if notice is received
by State Street at least 48 hours before such payment is to be invested.

    For more information  regarding the Dividend Reinvestment Plan and Voluntary
Cash Purchase  Plan,  brochures  are  available by calling (914)  921-5070 or by
writing directly to the Convertible Securities Fund.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          The  Annual  Meeting  of  the  Convertible  Securities
          Fund's  stockholders  will be held  at  8:30  A.M.  on
          Monday,   May  11,  1998,  at  the  Cole   Auditorium,
          Greenwich Public Library in Greenwich, Connecticut.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                       28
<PAGE>

                             DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
                 THE GABELLI CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES FUND, INC.
                    One Corporate Center, Rye, NY 10580-1434

Directors

Mario J. Gabelli, CFA
   President and Chief Investment Officer

E. Val Cerutti
   Chief Executive Officer
   Cerutti Consultants, Inc.

Felix J. Christiana
   Former Senior Vice President
   Dollar Dry Dock Savings Bank

Anthony J. Colavita, P.C.
   Attorney-at-Law
   Anthony J. Colavita, P.C.

Dugald A. Fletcher
   President, Fletcher & Company, Inc.

Karl Otto Pohl
   Former President, Deutsche Bundesbank

Anthony R. Pustorino
   Certified Public Accountant
   Professor, Pace University

Anthonie C. van Ekris
   Managing Director
   BALMAC International, Inc.

Salvatore J. Zizza
   Executive Vice President
   FMG Group

Officers and Portfolio Managers

Mario J. Gabelli, CFA
   President & Chief Investment Officer

Bruce N. Alpert
   Vice President & Treasurer

Peter W. Latartara
   Vice President

A. Hartswell Woodson, III
   Associate Portfolio Manager

James E. McKee
   Secretary

Investment Adviser

Gabelli Funds, Inc.
One Corporate Center
Rye, New York 10580-1434

Custodian, Transfer Agent and Registrar

State Street Bank and Trust Company

Legal Counsel

Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP

Stock Exchange Listing

NYSE-Symbol: GCV
Shares Outstanding 8,048,345

The Net Asset Value appears in the Publicly Traded Funds column, under the
heading "Convertible Securities Funds," in Saturday's The New York Times and
Monday's in The Wall Street Journal.

It is also listed in Barron's Mutual Funds/Closed End Funds section under the
heading "Convertible Securities Funds".

The Net Asset Value may be obtained each day by calling (914) 921-5071.

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For general information about the Gabelli Funds, call 1-800-GABELLI
(1-800-422-3554), fax us at 914-921-5118, visit our Internet homepage at:
http://www.gabelli.com, or e-mail us at: [email protected]
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Notice is hereby given in accordance with Section 23(c) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended, that the Convertible Securities Fund may from
time to time purchase shares of its capital stock in the open market when the
Convertible Securities Fund shares are trading at a discount of 10% or more from
the net asset value of the shares.
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<PAGE>

                 THE GABELLI CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES FUND, INC.
                    One Corporate Center, Rye, NY 10580-1434

                      Phone 1-800-GABELLI (1-800-422-3554)
                 Fax: 1-914-921-5118 Internet: www.gabelli.com
                         e-mail: [email protected]

                                                                     GBFCS-AR-98


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