METROPOLITAN LIFE SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL
485BPOS, 2000-04-06
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<PAGE>


   As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 6, 2000

                                                       Registration No. 33-47927
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

                             Washington, D.C. 20549

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

                                    Form S-6
                                 POST-EFFECTIVE

                             AMENDMENT No. 11
           To REGISTRATION STATEMENT Under THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933

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

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL
                             (Exact name of trust)

                      Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                              (Name of depositor)
                                1 Madison Avenue
                            New York, New York 10010
         (Complete address of depositor's principal executive offices)

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

                              GARY A. BELLER, ESQ.
              Senior Executive Vice-President and General Counsel
                      Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                                1 Madison Avenue
                            New York, New York 10010
                (Name and complete address of agent for service)

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

                                   Copies to:
                GARY O. COHEN, ESQ. and THOMAS C. LAUERMAN, ESQ.
                        Freedman, Levy, Kroll & Simonds
                         1050 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.
                             Washington, D.C. 20036

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


  It is proposed that the filing will become effective (check appropriate box)

    [_] immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)

    [X] on May 1, 2000 pursuant to paragraph (b)

    [_] on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of Rule 485

    [_] on (date), pursuant to paragraph (a) of Rule 485

  This filing is made in reliance on Rule 6c-3 and 6e-3(T) under the Investment
Company Act of 1940 to register an indefinite amount of interests in
Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL which funds certain variable universal
life insurance policies.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>

                     METROPOLITAN LIFE SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL

                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                             Cross-Reference Table

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Items of                                 Captions in Prospectuses
Form N-8B-2                              ------------------------
- -----------
<S>                        <C>
   1...................... Cover Page
   2...................... SUMMARY; METLIFE
   3...................... Inapplicable
   4...................... SALES AND ADMINISTRATION OF THE POLICIES
   5, 6, 7................ SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL; THE FUNDS
   8...................... FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
   9...................... Inapplicable
  10(a)................... OTHER POLICY PROVISIONS; POLICY RIGHTS
  10(b)................... OTHER POLICY PROVISIONS
  10(c), 10(d)............ SUMMARY; POLICY BENEFITS; POLICY RIGHTS; PAYMENT AND
                            ALLOCATION OF PREMIUMS; THE FIXED ACCOUNT; OTHER
                            POLICY PROVISIONS
  10(e)................... PAYMENT AND ALLOCATION OF PREMIUMS
  10(f)................... VOTING RIGHTS
  10(g)(1)-(3), 10(h)(1)-
   (3).................... RIGHTS WE RESERVE
  10(g)(4), 10(h)(4)...... Inapplicable
  10(i)................... POLICY BENEFITS; PAYMENT AND ALLOCATION OF PREMIUMS
  11...................... SUMMARY; SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL; THE FUNDS
  12(a)................... Cover Page
  12(b), 12(e)............ Inapplicable
  12(c), 12(d)............ SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL; THE FUNDS
</TABLE>


                                       i
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Items of
Form N-8B-2                               Captions in Prospectuses
- -----------                               ------------------------
<S>                         <C>
  13(a), 13(b), 13(c),      SUMMARY; CHARGES AND DEDUCTIONS; SEPARATE ACCOUNT
   13(d)...................  UL; THE FUNDS; POLICY BENEFITS

  13(e).................... SALES AND ADMINISTRATION OF THE POLICIES
  13(f), 13(g)............. Inapplicable
  14....................... ISSUING OF A POLICY
  15....................... PAYMENT AND ALLOCATION OF PREMIUMS
  16....................... SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL; THE FUNDS
  17(a), 17(b)............. Captions referenced under Items 10(c), 10(d), 10(e)
                             and 10(i) above
  17(c).................... Inapplicable
  18(a), 18(c)............. SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL; THE FUNDS
  18(b), 18(d)............. Inapplicable
  19....................... SALES AND ADMINISTRATION OF THE POLICIES; VOTING
                             RIGHTS; REPORTS
  20(a), 20(b)............. RIGHTS WE RESERVE; SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL; THE FUNDS
  20(c), 20(d), 20(e),
   20(f)................... Inapplicable
  21(a), 21(b)............. POLICY RIGHTS
  21(c), 22................ Inapplicable
  23....................... SALES AND ADMINISTRATION OF THE POLICIES
  24....................... OTHER POLICY PROVISIONS
  25....................... METLIFE
  26....................... CHARGES AND DEDUCTIONS
  27....................... METLIFE
  28....................... MANAGEMENT
  29....................... Inapplicable
  30, 31, 32, 33, 34....... Inapplicable
  35....................... GETTING MORE INFORMATION
  36, 37................... Inapplicable
</TABLE>


                                       ii
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Items of
Form N-8B-2                                Captions in Prospectuses
- -----------                                ------------------------
<S>                          <C>
  38........................ SALES AND ADMINISTRATION OF THE POLICIES; DISTRIBU-
                              TION OF THE POLICIES
  39........................ SUMMARY--METLIFE; SALES AND ADMINISTRATION OF THE
                              POLICIES
  40(a)..................... Inapplicable
  40(b)..................... SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL; THE FUNDS; CHARGES AND DEDUC-
                              TIONS
  41(a)..................... SUMMARY; METLIFE; SALES AND ADMINISTRATION OF THE
                              POLICIES
  41(b), 41(c), 42, 43...... Inapplicable
  44(a)..................... SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL; THE FUNDS; POLICY BENEFITS
  44(b)..................... Inapplicable
  44(c)..................... CHARGES AND DEDUCTIONS
  45........................ Inapplicable
  46........................ Captions referenced under Item 44 above
  47........................ Captions referenced under Items 10(c) and 16 above
  48, 49.................... Inapplicable
  50........................ SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL; THE FUNDS
  51(a), 51(b).............. SUMMARY; METLIFE; POLICY BENEFITS; POLICY RIGHTS
  51(c), 51(d), 51(e)....... Captions referenced under Item 10(i) above
  51(f)..................... PAYMENT AND ALLOCATION OF PREMIUMS
  51(g)..................... Captions referenced under Items 10(i) and 13 above
  51(h), 51(j).............. Inapplicable
  51(i)..................... SALES AND ADMINISTRATION OF THE POLICIES
  52(a), 52(c).............. RIGHTS WE RESERVE
  52(b), 52(d).............. Inapplicable
  53(a)..................... FEDERAL TAX MATTERS
  53(b), 54 through 58...... Inapplicable
  59........................ FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
</TABLE>

                                      iii
<PAGE>


                                                                        U
                                                                        L
                                                                        2
                                                                        0
                                                                        0
                                                                        1




                                   PROSPECTUS
                                      FOR

                    UL 2001, a Flexible Premium Multifunded
                             Life Insurance Policy
                 Issued by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company

                                May 1, 2000

The Policy is designed to provide:

 .Life insurance coverage

 .Flexible premium payments

 .A choice among three death benefit options

 .A choice among different guaranteed minimum death benefit durations

 . Funding options for allocating premium payments to and transferring cash
  value among a fixed interest account and the following Metropolitan Life
  Separate Account UL investment divisions which invest in the corresponding
  portfolios of the Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc. and series of the New
  England Zenith Fund (each a "Fund"), subject to state approval. For
  convenience, both portfolios and the series are referred to as "Portfolios"
  in this Prospectus:

                Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc. Portfolios:


 Lehman Brothers(R)                    State Street Research Aggressive Growth
 Aggregate Bond Index                  Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond
 State Street Research Income          Russell 2000 (R) Index
 State Street Research Diversified     T. Rowe Price Small Cap Growth
 MetLife Stock Index                   State Street Research Aurora Small
 Harris Oakmark Large Cap Value          Cap Value*
 T. Rowe Price Large Cap Growth        Scudder Global Equity
 State Street Research Growth          Morgan Stanley EAFE(R) Index
 Putnam Large Cap Growth*              Putnam International Stock (formerly
 MetLife Mid Cap Stock Index*            Santander International Stock)
 Neuberger Berman Partners Mid
   Cap Value
 Janus Mid Cap


                    New England Zenith Fund Portfolios:

 Davis Venture Value*      Loomis Sayles Small Cap*

- -----

* Available on or about July 5, 2000.

A word about risk:

This Prospectus discusses the risks associated with purchasing the Policy.
Other prospectuses discuss the risks associated with investment in the Fund
described therein. These prospectuses are being provided to you in addition to
this Prospectus because each of the Separate Account UL investment divisions
named above invest solely in a corresponding "Portfolio" of a Fund. This
Prospectus is not valid unless you also receive or have received current Fund
prospectuses.

The purchase of the Policy involves risk. You could lose money. You might have
to pay additional amounts of premium to avoid losing the life insurance
protection you purchased through a Policy.

How to learn more:

Before purchasing a Policy, read the information in this Prospectus and in each
Fund prospectus. Keep these prospectuses for future reference.

                                  -----------

Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") nor any state securities
authority has approved or disapproved these securities, nor have they
determined if this Prospectus is accurate or complete. This prospectus does not
constitute an offering in any jurisdiction where such offering may not lawfully
be made. Any representation otherwise is a criminal offense. Interests in the
Separate Account and the Fixed Account are not deposits or obligations of, or
insured or guaranteed by, the U.S. Government, any bank or other depository
institution including the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC"), the
Federal Reserve Board or any other agency or entity or person. We do not
authorize any representations about this offering other than as contained in
this Prospectus or its supplements or in our authorized supplemental sales
material.
<PAGE>




<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       Page
                                                     in this
   Subject                                          Prospectus
   -------                                          ----------
   <S>                                              <C>
   Summary.........................................      2
   MetLife.........................................      6
   Separate Account UL.............................      7
   The Fixed Account...............................      8
   The Funds.......................................      8
   Issuing a Policy................................      9
   Policy Benefits.................................      9
   Policy Rights...................................     15
   Payment and Allocation of Premiums..............     19
   Charges and Deductions..........................     21
   Federal Tax Matters.............................     24
   Showing Performance.............................     26
   Rights We Reserve...............................     27
   Other Policy Provisions.........................     27
   Sales and Administration of the Policies........     28
   Voting Rights...................................     30
   Reports.........................................     30
   Illustration of Policy Benefits.................     31
   Getting More Information........................     31
   Legal, Accounting, and Actuarial Matters........     32
   Management......................................     33
   Financial Statements............................
</TABLE>

Summary

This summary gives an overview of the Policy and is qualified by the more
detailed information in the balance of this Prospectus and the Policy.

MetLife issues the Policy. The Policy is designed to meet your changing life
insurance needs. In addition to the base Policy, optional insurance benefits
may also be added to your coverage.

Premiums

The Policy allows flexibility in making premium payments. There are certain
minimum premium requirements to keep the Policy in force during the first
Policy year and, if you wish, to keep the guaranteed minimum death benefit in
effect. Other than these minimum premium payment requirements, the Policy will
remain in force as long as the cash surrender value is large enough to cover
one monthly deduction, regardless of whether or not premium payments have been
made.

Cash Value

Your cash value in the Policy reflects your premium payments, the charges we
deduct, interest we credit if you have cash value in our fixed interest
account, any investment experience you have in our Separate Account, as well as
your loan and withdrawal activity. MetLife doesn't guarantee the investment
performance of the Separate Account UL investment divisions and you should
consider your risk tolerance before selecting any of these funding options.

                                       2
<PAGE>


Transfers and Automated Investment Strategies

You may transfer cash value among the funding options, subject to certain
limits. You may also choose among five automated investment strategies: the
Equity Generator SM, the Equalizer SM, the Allocator SM, the Rebalancer SM and
the Index Selector SM.

Specified Face Amount of Insurance

Within certain limits, you may choose your specified face amount of insurance
when the Policy is issued. You may also change the amount once in any 24 month
period, subject to our rules and procedures.

The Guaranteed Minimum Death Benefit

Generally, you may choose, in your Policy application, a period of time during
which your Policy will include a guaranteed minimum death benefit. If you
choose a guarantee, you will need to pay minimum premium amounts in order to
keep it in force. You may later cancel or reduce the length of the guarantee.

Death Benefit Options

Generally, you have a choice among three options. These range from an amount
equal to the specified face amount to an amount equal to the specified face
amount plus the policy cash value at the date of death.

Surrenders, Partial Withdrawals and Loans

Within certain limits, you may take partial withdrawals and loans from the
Policy. You may also surrender your Policy for its cash surrender value.

Tax Treatment

In most cases, you will not pay income taxes on withdrawals or surrenders or at
the Final Date of the Policy, until your cumulative withdrawn amounts exceed
the cumulative premiums you have paid. If your Policy is a modified endowment
contract, you will pay income taxes on loans and withdrawals to the extent of
any gains (which is generally the excess of cash value over the premiums paid).
In this case, an additional 10% tax may also apply. If the Policy is part of a
collateral assignment equity split dollar arrangement with an employer, any
increases in cash value that are not due to premium payments may be taxed
annually. The death benefit may be subject to Federal and state estate taxes,
but your beneficiary will generally not be subject to income tax on the death
benefit. As with any taxation matter, you should consult with and rely on the
advice of your own tax advisor.

Table of Charges and Expenses

This table shows the charges and expenses that you pay under your Policy. See
"Charges and Deductions," below for more information about your Policy's
charges:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
        Type of Charge or Expense        Amount of Charge or Expense
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  <C>                                   <S>
  Charges we deduct from each premium
   payment
   Sales charge:                        2.25% of each premium payment
   Charge for average expected state
    taxes attributable to premiums:     2% of each premium payment
   Charge for expected federal taxes
    attributable to premiums:           1.25% of each premium payment
                                        ----
   Total Expense Charge:                5.50% of each premium payment
</TABLE>

                                       3
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
         Type of Charge or Expense              Amount of Charge or Expense
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <C>                                     <S>
  Monthly Deduction from your Policy's
   cash value/1/
   Cost of term insurance charges:        Amount varies depending on the
                                          specifics of your Policy/2/
   Administration charge:
     First Policy year/3/:                (a) $20 per month for insureds Age 25
                                          and under
                                          (b) $30 per month for insureds Age 26-
                                          40
                                          (c) $35 per month for insureds Age 41
                                          and over.
   Second and later Policy years:         $10 per month unless you pay the
                                          Required Administrative Premium shown
                                          on page 3 of your Policy. If you pay
                                          these premiums, the monthly charge
                                          will be:
                                          (a) $5 per month for a specified face
                                          amount of $250,000 or more
                                          (b) $6 per month for a specified face
                                          amount between $100,000 and $249,999
                                          (c) $7 per month for a specified face
                                          amount of less than $100,000.
   Mortality and expense risk charge:     .075% of the cash value in the
                                          Separate Account on each monthly
                                          anniversary. We intend to (but, except
                                          for Policies issued in New York, do
                                          not guarantee that we will) reduce
                                          this charge after Policy year 10 to
                                          .05%.
   Underwriting charge: (applies only if  $5 per month for the first twelve
    you request an increase in your       months after the month you increase
    specified face amount)                your specified face amount.
   Charge for optional benefits added by  As specified in the form of each
    rider:                                rider.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Surrender charge on certain
   transactions:
   Full surrender or termination of your  The lesser of (a) 75% of one Federal
    Policy during its 1st year:           Guideline Annual Premium/4/ or (b) the
                                          amount of premiums you have actually
                                          paid
   Full surrender or termination of your  The lesser of (a) one Federal
    Policy during its 2nd year:           Guideline Annual Premium or (b) the
                                          amount of all premiums you have
                                          actually paid
   Full surrender or termination of your  90% of one Federal Guideline Annual
    Policy during its 3rd through 15th    Premium during Policy year 3, which
    year:                                 percentage declines periodically until
                                          it is 0% during Policy years 16 and
                                          later./5/ (We also will deduct the
                                          amount of any surrender charge
                                          remaining for any specified face
                                          amount increase, as discussed
                                          immediately below.)
   Full surrender or termination of your  An amount of surrender charge that we
    Policy during the 15 years after you  compute on essentially the same basis
    have increased your policy's          as if each such specified face amount
    specified face amount:                increase had been a separate, newly
                                          issued UL 2001 Policy/6/
   Reduction in specified face amount     A pro-rata portion of the surrender
    (i.e. "partial" surrender):           charge that would apply to a full
                                          surrender/7/
   Partial withdrawals of up to 10% of    No surrender charge
    the Policy's cash value/8/ each year:
   Partial withdrawal amounts in excess   A pro-rata portion of the surrender
    of the 10% free withdrawal limit:     charge that would apply to a full
                                          surrender/9/
</TABLE>
- --------
/1/Charges for any insurance coverage provided by any riders you choose will be
included as part of the monthly deduction.
/2/See "Cost of Term Insurance" under "Charges and Deductions" for a more
detailed discussion of factors affecting this charge. If you would like, we
will provide you with an illustration of the impact of these and other charges
under the Policy based on various assumptions.
/3/We will deduct any amount of the first year's administration charges that
remain unpaid at the time of any full surrender or other termination of your
Policy during its first year.
/4/The Federal Guideline Annual Premium is the amount of the level premium you
would need to pay each year for your policy (for Death Benefit Option A and all
riders), based on certain assumptions reflected below under "Charges and
Deductions--Surrender Charge."
/5/The precise timetable of how this percentage declines over this period is
set forth below under "Charges and Deductions--Surrender Charge." Also, during
each of these years, the surrender charge is subject to the further limitation
that it will never exceed the then-applicable percentage multiplied by the sum
of all premiums you have paid to date.
/6/For this purpose, however, premiums paid after the date you apply for the
increase will be assumed to be attributable to the original specified face
amount and each specified amount increase in the manner reflected below under
"Changes and Deductions--Surrender Charge."

                                       4
<PAGE>

/7/If there have been prior face amount increases, we take the reduction in
face amount from each increase in reverse chronological order and then from the
original specified amount. As we thus cancel each portion of specified face
amount, we deduct the amount of any remaining surrender charge associated with
that portion.
/8/This limit applies as of the date of the requested withdrawal, which is
aggregated for this purpose with all previous withdrawals during the same
Policy year.
/9/The amount deducted would be the same proportion of the full surrender
charge as the excess withdrawal bears to the Policy's total cash value. If
there have been prior face amount increases, this amount is assumed to
represent the surrender charge attributable to the most recent increases in
reverse chronological order and then to any remaining surrender charge on the
Policy's original specified face amount.

Fund Investment Management Fees and Direct Expenses

The investment manager of each of the Funds receives an investment management
fee. Each of the Funds also incurs direct expenses (see the Fund Prospectus and
Statement of Additional Information referred to therein for each Fund). You
bear indirectly your proportionate share of the fees and expenses of the
Portfolios of each Fund that correspond to the Separate Account investment
divisions you are using. The following sets forth the fees and expenses for
each Portfolio, expressed as a percentage of average net assets, for the year
ending 12/31/99 for all Portfolios of each Fund, except those Portfolios
(referred to in footnote (h) to the table) to be introduced on or about July 5,
2000, for which estimates for the first year are used. The percentages in the
table are before taking into account the expense reimbursements referred to in
the footnotes that follow the table.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             Total                                      Total
                          Manage-   Other    Annual                  Manage-   Other    Annual
       Portfolios         ment Fee Expenses Expenses  Portfolios     ment Fee Expenses Expenses
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>             <C>      <C>      <C>
Lehman Brothers(R)
Aggregate Bond Index        .25%     .15%     .40%     Janus Mid Cap   .67%     .04%     .71%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       State Street
                                                       Research
State Street Research                                  Aggressive
Income                      .32%     .06%     .38%     Growth(a)       .70%     .04%     .74%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Loomis Sayles
State Street Research                                  High Yield
Diversified(a)              .43%     .03%     .46%     Bond            .70%     .24%     .94%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Russell
                                                       2000(R)
MetLife Stock Index         .25%     .04%     .29%     Index(e)        .25%     .64%     .89%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       T. Rowe Price
Harris Oakmark Large Cap                               Small Cap
Value(a)(b)                 .75%     .40%    1.15%     Growth(a)       .52%     .09%     .61%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Loomis Sayles
T. Rowe Price Large Cap                                Small
Growth(a)(b)                .69%     .62%    1.31%     Cap(c)(f)       .90%     .10%    1.00%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       State Street
                                                       Research
State Street Research                                  Aurora Small
Growth(a)                   .47%     .04%     .51%     Cap Value(d)    .85%     .23%    1.08%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Scudder
Davis Venture Value(c)      .75%     .06%     .81%     Global Equity   .67%     .20%     .87%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Morgan
                                                       Stanley
Putnam Large Cap                                       EAFE(R)
Growth(d)                   .80%     .59%    1.39%     Index(g)        .30%    1.47%    1.77%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Putnam
MetLife Mid Cap Stock                                  International
Index(d)                    .25%     .65%     .90%     Stock           .90%     .22%    1.12%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Neuberger Berman
Partners Mid Cap
Value(a)(b)                 .70%     .48%    1.18%
</TABLE>
- --------

(a) The Metropolitan Series Fund directed certain portfolio trades to brokers
who paid a portion of the Fund's expenses. In addition, the Fund has entered
into arrangements with its custodian whereby credits realized as a result of
this practice were used to reduce a portion of each Portfolio's custodian fees.
These expense reductions are reflected in the table following (g) below.

(b) During 1999, we paid all expenses (other than management fees, brokerage
commissions, taxes, interest, extraordinary and non-recurring expenses)
(hereinafter "Expenses") in excess of .20% of the average net assets for each
of these Portfolios. This subsidy ceases when each Portfolio's assets reaches
$100 million or on November 8, 2000, whichever comes first. This expense
reimbursement is reflected in the table following (g) below. It states our
estimate of the effect of the anticipated reimbursement of expenses for the
entire current year.

                                       5
<PAGE>


(c) New England Investment Management, Inc. ("NEIM") pays MetLife for providing
administrative services. You do not bear these fees. NEIM absorbs the fees
payable to MetLife.

(d) These Portfolios will begin operations on or about July 5, 2000, except for
the Putnam Large Cap Growth Portfolio which will begin operations on May 1,
2000, but will not be available until on or about July 5, 2000. We will pay all
Expenses in excess of .20% of the average net assets for each of these
Portfolios until each Portfolio's total assets reaches $100 million or until
July 4, 2002, whichever comes first. Therefore, the expenses for these
Portfolios will be lower than those indicated in the table above. The table
following (g) below shows estimated first year expenses for these Portfolios
after expense reimbursement.

(e) We ceased subsidizing expenses for this Portfolio during 1999. The expense
information in the above table has been restated to reflect current expenses as
if they had been in effect all year. Beginning on February 22, 2000, we began
to pay all Expenses in excess of .30% of the average net assets for the Russell
2000(R) Index Portfolio until the Portfolio's assets reach $200 million or
until April 30, 2001, whichever comes first. This expense reimbursement is
reflected in the table following (g) below and is stated as if it was in effect
for the entire current year.

(f) NEIM pays all expenses other than brokerage costs, interest, taxes or other
extraordinary expenses in excess of 1.00% of the average net assets for this
Portfolio.

(g) We pay all Expenses in excess of .25% the average net assets for the Morgan
Stanley EAFE(R) Index Portfolio until the Portfolio's assets reach $100
million, or until November 8, 2000, whichever comes first. After such date,
MetLife will continue to pay all Expenses in excess of .40% of the Portfolio's
average net assets until the Portfolio's assets reach $200 million, or until
April 30, 2001, whichever comes first. These expense reimbursements are
reflected in the table below. It states our estimate of the effect of these
anticipated reimbursements of expenses for the entire current year.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                              Other     Total Annual                  Other     Total Annual
                            Expenses      Expenses                  Expenses      Expenses
                          After Expense After Expense             After Expense After Expense
       Portfolio          Reimbursement Reimbursement Portfolio   Reimbursement Reimbursement
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>           <C>           <C>         <C>           <C>
                                                      Neuberger
                                                      Berman
                                                      Partners
State Street Research                                 Mid Cap
Diversified                   .02%           .45%     Value           .06%           .76%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      State
                                                      Street
                                                      Research
Harris Oakmark Large Cap                              Aggressive
Value                         .19%           .94%     Growth          .02%           .72%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      Russell
T. Rowe Price Large Cap                               2000(R)
Growth                        .24%           .93%     Index           .30%           .55%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      T. Rowe
                                                      Price
State Street Research                                 Small Cap
Growth                        .02%           .49%     Growth          .09%           .61%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      State
                                                      Street
                                                      Research
                                                      Aurora
                                                      Small Cap
Putnam Large Cap Growth       .20%          1.00%     Value           .20%          1.05%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      Morgan
                                                      Stanley
MetLife Mid Cap Stock                                 EAFE(R)
Index                         .20%           .45%     Index           .36%           .66%
</TABLE>

Other

Please refer to "Federal Tax Matters-Our taxation" and "Policy Benefits--Cash
Value Transfers" for a description of certain charges that we currently do not
impose but may impose in the future.

MetLife

Metropolitan Life Insurance Company ("MetLife") is a wholly-owned subsidiary of
MetLife, Inc., a publicly traded company. Our main office is located at One
Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10010. MetLife was formed under the laws of
New York State in 1868. Headquartered in New York City, MetLife is a leading
provider of insurance and financial services to a broad spectrum of individual
and group customers. With approximately $420 billion of assets under management
as of December 31, 1999 on a pro-forma basis, including the acquisition of
GenAmerica Corp., MetLife provides individual insurance and investment products
to approximately 9 million households in the United States. MetLife also
provides group insurance and investment products to corporations and other
institutions employing over 33 million employees and members. We have listed
our directors and certain key officers under "Management", and our financial
information under "Financial Statements", below.

                                       6
<PAGE>

Giving us requests, instructions or notifications

Contacting us:


[SIDEBAR: You can contact us at our Designated Office.]

You can communicate all of your requests, instructions and notifications to us
by contacting us in writing at our Designated Office. We may require that
certain requests, instructions and notifications be made on forms that we
provide. These include: changing your beneficiary; taking a Policy loan;
changing your death benefit option; taking a partial withdrawal; surrendering
your Policy; making transfer requests (including elections with respect to the
automated investment strategies) or changing your premium allocations. Our
Designated Office is our home office at 1 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10010.
We may name additional or alternate Designated Offices. If we do, we will
notify you in writing.

When your requests, instructions and notifications become effective:

 . Generally, requests, premium payments and other instructions and
  notifications are effective on the Date of Receipt. In those cases, the
  effective time is at the end of the Valuation Period during which we receive
  them at our Designated Office. (Some exceptions to this general rule are
  noted below and elsewhere in this Prospectus.)


 . A Valuation Period is the period between two successive Valuation Dates. It
   begins at the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange on a
   Valuation Date and ends at the close of regular trading on the New York
   Stock Exchange on the next succeeding Valuation Date. The close of regular
   trading is 4:00 p.m., Eastern Time on most days.

 . A Valuation Date is:

  . Each day on which the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading.

  . Other days, if we think that there has been a sufficient degree of
    trading in a Fund's portfolio securities that the current net asset value
    of its shares might be materially affected.

 . Your Investment Start Date is the date the first net premium is applied to
  the Fixed Account and is the later of (A) the Date of Policy and (B) the Date
  of Receipt of your first premium payment. Your premium allocation
  instructions and transfer requests for investment in the separate account
  that you make in your Policy application, or within 20 days after your
  Investment Start Date, will take effect on the end of the first Valuation
  Date that is 20 days after your Investment Start Date.

 . The effective date of your Automated Investment Strategies will be that set
  forth in the strategy chosen.

Separate Account UL

We established the Separate Account under New York law on December 13, 1988.
The Separate Account receives premium payments from the Policy described in
this Prospectus and other variable life insurance policies that we issue. We
have registered the Separate Account as a unit investment trust under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act"). The assets in the Separate
Account legally belong to us, but they are held solely for the benefit of
investors in the Separate Account and no one else, including our other
creditors. We will keep an amount in the Separate Account that at least equals
the value of our commitments to policy owners that are based on their
investments in the Separate Account. We can also keep charges that we deduct
and other excess amounts in the Separate Account or we can transfer the excess
out of the Separate Account.

                                       7
<PAGE>


[SIDEBAR: Each Separate Account investment division invests in a corresponding
Portfolio of a Fund.]


The Separate Account has subdivisions, called "investment divisions." Each
investment division invests its assets exclusively in shares of a corresponding
Portfolio of a Fund. We can add new investment divisions to or eliminate
investment divisions from the Separate Account. You can designate how you would
like your net premiums and cash value to be allocated among the available
investment divisions and our Fixed Account. Amounts you allocate to each
investment division receive the investment experience of the investment
division, and you bear this investment risk.

The Fixed Account

The Fixed Account is part of our general assets that are not in any legally-
segregated separate accounts. Amounts in the Fixed Account are credited with
interest at an effective annual rate of at least 3%. We may also credit excess
interest on such amounts. Different excess interest rates may apply to
different amounts based upon when such amounts were allocated to the Fixed
Account and whether they were premium payments or transfers from the investment
divisions. Any partial amounts we remove from the Fixed Account, (such as any
portion of your Policy's monthly deduction that is allocable to the Fixed
Account), will be taken from the most recently allocated amounts first.

Any excess interest rate will be credited for at least 12 months before a new
rate is credited. We can delay transfers, withdrawals, surrender and payment of
Policy loans from the Fixed Account for up to 6 months.

Since the Fixed Account is not registered under the federal securities laws,
this Prospectus contains only limited information about the Fixed Account. The
Policy gives you more information on the operation of the Fixed Account.


[SIDEBAR: You should carefully review the investment objectives, strategies, and
risks of each Fund's Portfolios, which are contained in each Fund prospectus you
have also received.]



The Funds


Each of the Funds is a "series" type of mutual fund, which is registered as an
open-end management investment company under the 1940 Act. Each Fund is divided
into Portfolios, each of which represents a different class of stock in which a
corresponding investment division of the Separate Account invests. You should
read each Fund prospectus, which you have also received. They contain
information about each Fund and its Portfolios, including the investment
objectives, strategies, risks and investment advisers that are associated with
each Portfolio. They also contain information on our different separate
accounts and those of our affiliates that invest in each Fund and the risks
related thereto.

As of the end of each Valuation Period, we purchase and redeem Fund shares for
the Separate Account at their net asset value without any sales or redemption
charges. These purchases and redemptions reflect the amount of any of the
following transactions that take effect at the end of the Valuation Period:

 . The allocation of net premiums to the Separate Account.

 . Dividends and distributions on Fund shares that are reinvested as of the
  dates paid (which reduces the value of each share of the Fund, increases the
  number of Fund shares outstanding, but has no affect on the cash value in the
  Separate Account).

 . Policy loans and loan repayments allocated to the Separate Account.

 . Transfers to and among investment divisions.

 . Withdrawals and surrenders taken from the Separate Account.

                                       8
<PAGE>


[SIDEBAR: We will issue a Policy to you as owner. You will have all the rights
under the Policy, including the ability to name a new owner or contingent
owner.]

Issuing a Policy

If you want to own a Policy, then you must complete an application, which must
be received by the Designated Office. We reserve the right to reject an
application for any reason permitted by law, and our acceptance of an
application is subject to our underwriting rules.

Generally, we will issue a Policy only for insureds that are age 80 or less
(although we may decide to permit an insured that is older) that have provided
evidence of insurability that we find acceptable. An "insured" is the person
upon whose life we issue the Policy. You do not have to be the insured. For the
purpose of computing the insured's age under the Policy, we start with the
insured's age on the Date of Policy which is set forth in the Policy. Age under
the Policy at any other time is then computed using that issue age and adding
the number of full Policy years completed.

The Date of Policy is usually the date the Policy application is approved. We
use the Date of Policy to calculate the Policy years (and Policy months and
monthly anniversaries). We may permit a Date of Policy that is earlier than the
date the application is approved if there have been no material
misrepresentations in the application (but not earlier than the date that the
application is completed) in order to preserve a younger age for the insured.
Your Date of Policy can also be the date the application is completed if you
ask us and if we receive a payment of at least $2,500 with the application.

Temporary insurance will be provided for up to 90 days from the date of the
application, provided that we receive a payment equal to at least one "check-o-
matic" payment and any necessary medical examination has been completed. Even
if the insured hasn't completed the medical examination, there will be coverage
if the insured dies from an accident within 30 days of the date of the
application. The temporary insurance does not cover death by suicide. The
temporary insurance provided is equal to the specified face amount applied for
up to a maximum of $500,000. There will be no charge for the insurance
protection under the temporary insurance.

Insurance coverage under the Policy will begin at the time the Policy is
delivered and any temporary insurance that is then in force will end. For
coverage to be effective, the insured's health must be the same as stated in
the application and, in most states, the insured must not have sought medical
advice or treatment after the date of the application. As to when charges under
this Policy begin, see "Charges Included in the Monthly Deduction."

Policy Benefits

Insurance Proceeds

If the Policy is in force, we will pay your beneficiary the insurance proceeds
as of the end of the Valuation Period that includes the insured's date of
death. We will pay this amount after we receive documents that we request as
due proof of the insured's death. The beneficiary can receive the death benefit
in a single sum or under an income plan described below. You may make this
choice during the insured's lifetime. If no selection is made we will place the
amount in an account to which we will credit interest, and the beneficiary will
have immediate access to all or part of that amount. The beneficiary has one
year from the date the insurance proceeds are paid to change the selection from
a single sum payment to an income plan, as long as we have made no payments
from the interest-bearing account. If the terms of the income plan permit the
beneficiary to withdraw the entire amount from the plan, the beneficiary can
also name contingent beneficiaries.

                                       9
<PAGE>


The insurance proceeds equal:

 . The death benefit under the death benefit option, alternate death benefit or
  minimum guaranteed death benefit that is then in effect; plus

 . Any additional insurance proceeds provided by rider; minus

 . Any unpaid Policy loans and accrued interest thereon, and any due and unpaid
  charges accruing during a grace period.


[SIDEBAR: The Policy generally offers a choice of three death benefit
options.]

Death Benefit Options

Generally, you can choose among three options, although the choice may be
limited based upon the insured's age. You select which option you want in the
Policy application. The three options are:

 . Option A: The death benefit is a level amount and equals the specified face
  amount of the Policy.

 . Option B: The death benefit varies and equals the specified face amount of
  the Policy plus the cash value on the date of death.

 . Option C: The death benefit is one of two amounts and is available only if
  insured is age 60 or less when we issue the Policy:

 . The death benefit varies and equals the specified face amount plus the cash
   value on the date of death, until the insured is age 65 ("CI").

 . At age 65, the death benefit becomes a level amount equal to the specified
   face amount under CI plus the cash value at the end of the Valuation Date
   immediately preceding the date on which the insured became age 65. This new
   amount then becomes the specified face amount ("CII").

There are issues that you should consider in choosing your death benefit
option. For example, under Options B and CI, the cash value is added to the
specified face amount. Therefore, the death benefit will generally be greater
under these options than under Options A and CII, for Policies with the same
specified face amount and premium payments. By the same token, the cost of
insurance will generally be greater under Options B and CI than under Options A
and CII.

You can change your death benefit option after the second Policy year, and
thereafter, once in any 12 month period provided that:

 . Your cash surrender value after the change would be enough to pay at least
  two monthly deductions.

 . The specified face amount continues to be no less than the minimum we allow
  after a decrease.

 . The total premiums you have paid do not exceed the then current maximum
  premium limitations permitted under Internal Revenue Service rules.

 . If the change is to C, the insured is age 60 or less.

[SIDEBAR: You can generally change your death benefit option.]

Any change will be effective on the monthly anniversary on or immediately
following the Date of Receipt of the request. A change in death benefit will
have the following effects on your specified face amount:

 . Change from A or CII to B or CI: The specified face amount will decrease to
  equal the death benefit less the cash value on the effective date of the
  change.

                                       10
<PAGE>

 . Change from B or CI to A or CII: The specified face amount will increase to
  equal the death benefit plus the cash value of the Policy on the effective
  date of the change.

 . Change from B to CI or A to CII: The specified face amount will remain the
  same.

Before you change your death benefit option you should consider the following:

 . If the term insurance portion of your death benefit changes, as it may with a
  change from A or CII to B or CI and vice versa, the term insurance charge
  will also change. This will affect your cash value and, in some cases, the
  death benefit levels.

 . The premium requirements for maintaining the guaranteed minimum death benefit
  may change, which could affect your ability to maintain it.

 . If your specified face amount changes because of the change in death benefit
  option, consider also the issues presented by changing your specified face
  amount that are described under "Specified Face Amount," below. These issues
  include the possibility: that your Policy would become a modified endowment
  contract; that you would receive a taxable distribution; of an increase or
  decrease in the monthly administration charge; and of changes in the maximum
  premium amounts that you can pay.

Alternate Death Benefit

In order to ensure that the Policy qualifies as life insurance under the
federal income tax laws, the beneficiary will receive an alternate death
benefit if it is greater than the amount that the beneficiary would have
received under the death benefit option that you chose. The alternate death
benefit is as follows:

<TABLE>
Age of Insured at Death  40 and  45  50  55  60  65  70 75 to 90  95
                           less
<S>                      <C>    <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>      <C>
% of Cash Value: *          250 215 185 150 130 120 115      105 100
</TABLE>
- --------
*For the ages not listed, the percentage decreases by a ratable portion for
each full year.

[SIDEBAR: The Policy offers a guaranteed minimum death benefit.]

Guaranteed Minimum Death Benefit

You can choose to have a guaranteed minimum death benefit for one of several
specified periods of time, if you meet certain requirements. Generally, the
amount of guaranteed minimum death benefit equals the specified face amount of
insurance, plus any additional death benefits provided by rider. Availability
may be restricted in your state or by the insured's rating class, however.

There is no additional charge for the guarantee, but in order to keep the
guarantee in effect, you will need to pay certain minimum premiums, which vary
based on many factors (see "Premiums" below). We test the Policy on each
monthly anniversary or upon the Policy's lapse date (depending on state
requirements)--the "testing date"--to make sure that you have paid the minimum
premiums required to keep the guarantee for the duration you chose. If you
haven't made the minimum premium payments, we will tell you and give you 61
days from the testing date to make any additional payment to keep the guarantee
at the then current duration. If we do not receive the required payment, we
will reduce the duration of the guarantee to one that the premiums you have
paid would support and that would have been available to you. If no shorter
duration is available to you, we will terminate the guarantee. A duration
cannot be reactivated, once we terminate it.

                                       11
<PAGE>


Each duration for the guaranteed minimum death benefit has its own premium
requirement that supports it. The longer the duration, the greater the premiums
required. At issue, we will look at the premium you plan to pay and give you
which ever duration that premium supports. You can reduce the duration by
reducing the premiums paid to an amount that will only support a shorter
duration. A duration cannot be increased by subsequently paying additional
premiums nor can a duration be reinstated once it is terminated. The durations
for the guaranteed minimum death benefit are*:

 . For the first five Policy years.

 . To age 65, but only if the insured is age 60 or less when the Policy is
  issued.

 . To age 75, but only if the insured is age 70 or less when the Policy is
  issued.

 . To age 85, but only if the insured is age 80 or less when the Policy is
  issued.
- --------

*For Policies issued in New York, the guaranteed minimum death benefit
guarantees payment of the specified face amount of insurance only (and not any
rider benefits), and the options for the duration of the guarantee are
generally: (i) for the first five Policy years; (ii) to age 55 (available only
if the insured was between age 18 and age 50 on the date the Policy was issued)
or for the first 20 Policy years (if the insured was less than age 18 on the
date the Policy was issued); or (iii) to age 65 (available only if the insured
was between age 18 and age 60 on the date the Policy was issued) or to age 60
(if the insured was less than age 18 on the date the Policy was issued). For
Policies issued in Massachusetts and New Jersey (when approved), the only
available duration of the guaranteed minimum death benefit is the first five
Policy years. It is possible that other states may, in the future, require
similar variations in the durations that are available.

Specified Face Amount

The specified face amount is the basic amount of insurance specified in your
Policy. The Minimum Initial Specified Face amount is the smallest amount of
specified face amount for which a Policy may be issued. Currently these amounts
are generally:

 . $100,000 for insureds in the preferred rate class

 . $50,000 for most other insureds

 . $25,000 for certain insureds over age 59.

 . $250,000 for most Policies distributed through broker-dealers not affiliated
  with us.

[SIDEBAR: You can generally increase or decrease your Policy's specified face
amount.]

Generally, you may change your specified face amount after the second Policy
year, and thereafter, once in any 24 month period, as long as the insured is
age 79 or under. Any change will be effective on: (a) the monthly anniversary
on or next following the Date of Receipt of your request; or (b) if we require
evidence of insurability, the date we approve your request.

You are permitted to decrease the specified face amount to as low as $25,000
except that no reduction may decrease the specified face amount below the
Minimum Initial Specified Face Amount during the first five Policy years or one
half that amount thereafter. The lowest available specified face amount
requirements also apply to decreases that result from partial withdrawals or
changes in death benefit option. If there have been previous specified face
amount increases, any decreases in specified face amount will be made in the
following order: (i) the specified face amount provided by the most recent
increase; (ii) the next most recent increases successively; and (iii) the
initial specified face amount.

                                       12
<PAGE>

You may increase the specified face amount only if: (a) the guaranteed minimum
death benefit is in effect; or (b) the cash surrender value after the change is
large enough to cover at least two monthly deductions based on your most recent
cost of term insurance charge. Generally, the minimum specified face amount
increase is $5,000 ($10,000 for Policies issued in New York). Any increase will
require that we receive additional evidence of insurability that is
satisfactory to us. We will also impose an underwriting charge.

Before you change your specified face amount you should consider the following:

 . The term insurance portion of your death benefit will likely change and so
  will the term insurance charge. This will affect the insurance charges, cash
  value and, in some cases, death benefit levels.

 . Reducing your specified face amount in the first 15 Policy years may result
  in our returning an amount to you which could then be taxed on an income
  first basis.

 . We will deduct a portion of any applicable surrender charge at the time of
  any decrease in specified face amount, other than a decrease resulting
  automatically from a partial withdrawal or from a death benefit option
  change.

 . We will establish an additional amount of surrender charge at the time of any
  increase in the specified face amount, other than an increase resulting
  automatically from a change of death benefit option.

 . The premium requirements for maintaining the guaranteed minimum death benefit
  will change, which could affect your ability to maintain it.

 . The amount of additional premiums that the tax laws permit you to pay into
  your Policy may increase or decrease. The additional amount you can pay
  without causing your Policy to be a modified endowment contract for tax
  purposes may also increase or decrease.

 . In some circumstances, the Policy could become a modified endowment contract.

 . The monthly administration charge may change.

Cash Value

[SIDEBAR: Your Policy is designed to accumulate cash value.]

Your Policy's cash value equals:

 . The Fixed Account cash value, plus

 . The Policy Loan Account cash value, plus

 . The Separate Account cash value.

Your Policy's cash surrender value equals your cash value minus:

 . Any outstanding Policy loans (plus accrued interest);

 . Any surrender charges; and

 . The administration charge for any full Policy month remaining in the first
  Policy year.

The Separate Account cash value allocated to each investment division is
calculated as follows:

 . 20 days after your Investment Start Date, we will allocate your cash value
  among the investment divisions as you requested your net premiums to be
  allocated in your application.

                                       13
<PAGE>


 . Thereafter, at the end of each Valuation Period the cash value in an
  investment division will equal:

  . The cash value in the investment division at the beginning of the
    Valuation Period; plus

  . All net premiums, loan repayments and cash value transfers into the
    investment division during the Valuation Period; minus

  . All partial cash withdrawals, loans and cash value transfers out of the
    investment division during the Valuation Period; minus

  . The portion of any charges and deductions allocated to the cash value in
    the investment division during the Valuation Period; plus

  . The net investment return for the Valuation Period on the amount of cash
    value in the investment division at the beginning of the Valuation
    Period. The net investment return currently equals the rate of increase
    or decrease in the net asset value per share of the underlying Fund
    portfolio over the Valuation Period, adjusted upward to take appropriate
    account of any dividends and other distributions paid by the portfolio
    during the period. The net investment return could in the future be
    reduced by a charge for taxes that we have the right to impose.

Benefit at Final Date

The Final Date is the Policy anniversary on which the insured is Age 95. We
will allow you to extend that date, however, where permitted by state law. If
the insured is living on the Final Date, we will pay you the cash value of the
Policy, reduced by any outstanding loans (plus accrued interest). You can
receive the cash value in a single sum, in an account that earns interest, or
under an available income plan.

Optional Benefits Added By Rider

You may be eligible for certain benefits provided by rider, subject to certain
underwriting requirements and the payment of additional premiums. We will
deduct any charges for the rider(s) as part of the monthly deduction. Each
rider contains important information, including limits and conditions that
apply to the benefits. If you decide to purchase any of the riders, you should
carefully review their provisions to be sure if the benefit is something that
you want. You should also consider:

 . The effects on the premium requirements for maintaining the guaranteed
  minimum death benefit, which could affect your ability to maintain it.

 . That the addition of certain riders can restrict your ability to exercise
  certain rights under the Policy.

 . That the amount of benefits provided under the rider is not based on
  investment performance of a separate account; but, if the Policy terminates
  because of poor investment performance or any other reason, the riders
  generally will also terminate.

 . The tax consequences. You should also consult with your tax advisor before
  purchasing one of the riders.

                                       14
<PAGE>

Generally, we currently make the following benefits available by rider:

<TABLE>
  <S>                                        <C>
  . Disability Waiver of Premium Benefit/1/  .Children's Term Insurance Benefit
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  . Disability Waiver of Monthly Deduction   .Spouse Term Insurance Benefit
    Benefit/2/
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  . Accidental Death Benefit                 .Accelerated Death Benefit/3/
</TABLE>
- --------

/1/This rider is designed for owners who seek to build cash value or maintain
the guaranteed minimum death benefit during a period of disability. In order to
qualify for this rider, you must maintain a premium level equal to that
required under the rider. Otherwise, the rider will operate like the Disability
Waiver of Monthly Deduction benefit rider, which in some cases could increase
the cost of the rider. The selected premium level will not necessarily be
sufficient to keep the Policy in force to the Final Date. Therefore, the Policy
could terminate, unless a guaranteed minimum death benefit is in effect. If
your Policy was issued in New York and your Policy includes this rider, you may
not add any other rider.
/2/An increase in specified face amount may not be covered by this rider. If
not, the portion of the monthly deduction associated with the increase will
continue to be deducted from the cash value, which if insufficient, could
result in the Policy's termination. For this reason, it may be advantageous for
the owner, at the time of total disability, to reduce the specified face amount
to that covered by this rider.
/3/Payment under this rider may affect eligibility for benefits under state or
federal law.


[SIDEBAR: Generally, you can receive the Policy's insurance proceeds, amounts
payable at the Final Date or amounts paid upon surrender under an income plan
instead of in a lump sum.]

Income Plans
Before you purchase an income plan you should consider:

 . The tax consequences associated with the Policy proceeds, which can vary
  considerably, depending on whether a plan is chosen. You or your beneficiary
  should consult with a qualified tax adviser about tax consequences.

 . That your Policy will terminate at the time you purchase an income plan and
  you will receive a new contract, which describes the terms of the income
  plan. You should carefully review the terms of the new contract, because it
  contains important information about the terms and conditions of the income
  plan.

 . That these plans do not have a variable investment return.

Generally, we currently make the following income plans available:

<TABLE>
  <S>                                <C>
  . Interest income                  .Installment Income for a Stated Period
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  . Installment Income for a Stated  . Single Life Income--Guaranteed
    Amount                             Payment Period
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  . Joint and Survivor Life Income   .Single Life Income--Guaranteed Return
</TABLE>

Policy Rights

Cash Value Transfers

[SIDEBAR: You can transfer your cash value among the investment divisions and
the Fixed Account at any time beginning 20 days after the Investment Start
Date.]

The minimum amount you may transfer is $50 or, if less, the total amount in an
investment option. You may make transfers at any time, but we do reserve the
right to limit transfers to four per Policy year and to limit transfers from
the Fixed Account to one each year on the Policy anniversary date. We do not
currently charge for transfers, but we do reserve the right to charge up to $25
per transfer, except for transfers under the Automated Investment Strategies.
Currently, transfers are not taxable transactions.


Each Fund may restrict or refuse purchases or redemptions of shares in their
Portfolios as a result of certain market timing activities. You should read
each Fund's prospectus for more details.

                                       15
<PAGE>


We reserve the right to refuse to accept any transaction request where the
request would tend to disrupt the administration of the Policies or is not in
the best interest of Policy owners or the Separate Account.

 . Automated Investment Strategies: You can choose one of five currently
  available strategies. You can also change or cancel your choice at any time.

 . Equity Generator: allows you to transfer an amount equal to the interest
   earned in the Fixed Account in any Policy month equal to at least $20 to
   the MetLife Stock Index investment division or the State Street Research
   Aggressive Growth investment division. The transfer will be made at the
   beginning of the Policy month following the Policy month in which the
   interest was earned.

 . Equalizer: allows you to periodically equalize amounts in your Fixed
   Account and either the MetLife Stock Index investment division or the State
   Street Research Aggressive Growth investment division. We currently make
   equalization each quarter. We will terminate this strategy if you make a
   transfer out of the investment division or the Fixed Account that isn't
   part of the strategy. You may then reelect the Equalizer on your next
   Policy anniversary.

 . Rebalancer: allows you to periodically redistribute amounts in the Fixed
   Account and investment divisions in the same proportion that the net
   premiums are then being allocated. We currently make the redistribution
   each quarter.

 . Allocator: allows you to systematically transfer money from the Fixed
   Account to any investment division(s). You must have enough cash value in
   the Fixed Account to enable the election to be in effect for three months.
   The election can be to transfer each month:

  . A specific amount until the cash value in the Fixed Account is exhausted,

  . A specific amount for a specific number of months, or

  . Amounts in equal installments until the total amount you have requested
    has been transferred.

 . Index Selector: Allows you to choose one of five asset allocation models
   which are designed to correlate to various risk tolerance levels. Based on
   your selection, 100% of your cash value will be allocated among the Lehman
   Brothers Aggregate Bond Index, Morgan Stanley EAFE Index, MetLife Stock
   Index, Russell 2000 Index and MetLife Mid Cap Stock Index (available on or
   about July 5, 2000) investment divisions and the Fixed Account. Each
   quarter we will redistribute amounts in the Fixed Account and investment
   divisions in the same proportion as you originally requested. We may, in
   the future, change the available models and allow you to allocate less than
   100% to this strategy. Before electing this strategy, you should consider
   the fact that investment returns using this strategy may be more volatile
   than the other strategies.

 . Transfers by Telephone: We may, if permitted by state law, allow you to make
  transfer requests, changes to Automated Investment Strategies and allocations
  of future net premium by phone. We may also allow you to authorize your sales
  representative to make such requests. The following procedures apply:

 . We must have received your authorization in writing satisfactory to us, to
   act on instructions from any person that claims to be you or your

                                       16
<PAGE>

  sales representative, as applicable, as long as that person follows our
  procedures.

 . We will institute reasonable procedures to confirm that instructions we
   receive are genuine. Our procedures will include receiving from the caller
   your personalized data.

 . All telephone calls will be recorded.

 . You will receive a written confirmation of any transaction.

 . Neither the Separate Account nor we will be liable for any loss, expense or
   cost arising out of a telephone request if we reasonably believed the
   request to be genuine.

 . You should contact our Designated Office with any questions regarding the
   procedures.

Loan Privileges

  [SIDEBAR: You can borrow from us and use your Policy as security for the
loan.]

The amount of each loan must be:

 . At least $500.

 . No more than the cash surrender value less two monthly deductions (unless
  your Policy provides for a different amount required by state law) when added
  to all other outstanding Policy loans.

As of your loan request's Date of Receipt, we will:

 . Remove an amount equal to the loan first from your cash value in the Fixed
  Account. If an additional amount is required, we will remove it from the cash
  value in the investment divisions of the Separate Account in the same
  proportion as your cash value is then allocated.

 . Transfer such cash value to the Policy loan account, where it will be
  credited with interest at the rate of 4% per year. At least once a year, we
  will transfer any interest earned in your Policy loan account to the Fixed
  Account and the investment divisions, according to the way that we allocate
  monthly deductions.

 . Charge you interest, which will accrue daily at a rate of 6% per year (which
  is the maximum rate we will ever charge). We currently intend to (but don't
  guarantee that we will) reduce this rate to 4.6% after the 10th Policy year.
  Your interest payments are due at the end of each Policy year and if you
  don't pay the amount within 31 days after it is due, we will treat it as a
  new Policy loan.

Repaying your loans (plus accrued interest) is done by sending in payments at
least equal to your voluntary planned periodic premium, or $50, if less. Any
payments we receive while a loan (plus accrued interest) is outstanding, will
be applied first to repaying the loan, and, if any amounts remain after
repayment, they will be considered premium. Even though we will repay the loan
with these payments, the resulting reduction in outstanding loans will have the
same effect as premium payments for purpose of maintaining your guaranteed
minimum death benefit. We will allocate your repayment to the Fixed Account and
the investment divisions, in the same proportion that net premiums are then
allocated.

Before taking a Policy loan you should consider the following:

 . Interest payments on loans are generally not deductible for tax purposes.

 . Under certain situations, Policy loans could be considered taxable
  distributions.

                                       17
<PAGE>


 . If you surrender your Policy or if we terminate your Policy, or at the Final
  Date, any outstanding loan amounts (plus accrued interest) will be taxed as a
  distribution. (See "Federal Tax Matters--The Policy--Loans" below.)

 . A policy loan increases the chances of our terminating your policy due to
  insufficient cash value. Unless the guaranteed minimum death benefit is in
  effect, we will terminate your Policy with no value if: (A) on a monthly
  anniversary your loans (plus accrued interest) exceed your cash value minus
  the monthly deduction; and (B) we tell you of the insufficiency and you do
  not make a sufficient payment within 61 days of the monthly anniversary.

 . Your Policy's death benefit will be reduced by any unpaid loan (plus accrued
  interest).

Surrender and Withdrawal Privileges


[SIDEBAR: You can surrender your Policy for its cash surrender value.]

We may ask you to return the Policy before we honor your request to surrender
your Policy. You can choose to have the proceeds paid in a single sum, or under
an income plan. If the insured dies after you surrender the Policy but before
the end of the Policy month in which you surrendered the Policy, we will pay
your beneficiary an amount equal to the difference between the Policy's death
benefit and its cash value, computed as of the surrender date.


You can make partial withdrawals at any time if:


 . The withdrawal would not result in a reduction in your specified face amount
  during the first 2 Policy years, as described under "Specified Face Amount"
  above.

 . The withdrawal would not result in the cash surrender value being less than
  sufficient to pay 2 monthly deductions.

 . The withdrawal is at least $500.

 . The withdrawal would not result in your specified face amount falling below
  the minimum allowable amount, as described under "Specified Face Amount,"
  above.

 . The withdrawal would not result in total premiums paid exceeding the then
  current maximum premium limitation determined by the Internal Revenue Code
  rules.

If you make a request for a partial withdrawal that is not permitted, we will
tell you and you may then ask for a smaller withdrawal or surrender the Policy.
We will deduct your withdrawal from the Fixed Account and the investment
divisions in the same way we allocate the monthly deduction.

Before surrendering your Policy or requesting a partial withdrawal you should
consider the following:

 . Surrender charges may apply.

 . Amounts received may be taxable as income and, if your Policy is a modified
  endowment contract, subject to certain tax penalties.

 . Your Policy could become a modified endowment contract.

 . For partial withdrawals, your death benefit will decrease by the amount of
  the withdrawal (for options A and CI, your specified face amount will also
  decrease, generally by the amount of the withdrawal).

 . Any withdrawal that causes the specified face amount to decrease could cause
  an increase in the monthly administrative charge.

                                       18
<PAGE>

 . In some cases you may be better off taking a Policy loan, rather than a
  partial withdrawal.

Exchange Privilege

If you decide that you no longer want to take advantage of the investment
divisions in the Separate Account, you may transfer all of your money into the
Fixed Account. There is currently no charge on transfers. Even if we do have a
transfer charge in the future, such charge will never be imposed on a transfer
of your entire cash value (or the cash value attributable to a specified face
amount increase) to the Fixed Account within the first 24 Policy months (or
within 24 Policy months after a specified face amount increase you have
requested, as applicable). In some states, in order to exercise your exchange
privilege, you must transfer, without charge, the Policy cash value (or the
portion attributable to a specified face amount increase) to a flexible premium
fixed benefit life insurance policy, which we make available.


Third Party Requests


Generally, we only accept requests for transactions or information from you.
Therefore, we reserve the right not to process transactions requested on your
behalf by your agent with a power of attorney or any other authorization. This
includes processing transactions by an agent you designate, through a power of
attorney or other authorization, who has the ability to control the amount and
timing of transfers for a number of other Policy owners, and who simultaneously
makes the same request or series of requests on behalf of other Policy owners.


Payment and Allocation of Premiums

Premiums

Unless your Policy has a guaranteed minimum death benefit in effect, the
payment of premiums won't guarantee that your Policy will remain in force.
Rather, this depends on your Policy's cash surrender value.

Paying Premiums

[SIDEBAR: You can make voluntary planned periodic premium payments and
unscheduled premium payments.]

You can make premium payments, subject to certain limitations discussed below,
through the:


 . Voluntary planned periodic premium schedule: You choose the schedule on your
  application. The schedule sets forth the amount of premiums, fixed payment
  intervals, and the period of time that you intend to pay premiums. The
  schedule can be: (A) annual; (B) semi-annual; (C) periodic automatic pre-
  authorized transfers from your checking account ( "check-o-matic"); (D)
  systematic through payment plans that your employer makes available; or (E)
  through another method to which we agree. You do not have to pay premiums in
  accordance with your voluntary planned period premium schedule.

 . Unscheduled premium payment option: You can make premium payments at any
  time.

Paying Premiums to Maintain the Guaranteed Minimum Death Benefit

You can pay certain levels of premiums that entitle you to a guaranteed minimum
death benefit for a specified period of time. To keep the guarantee

                                       19
<PAGE>

[SIDEBAR:  Net premiums are your premiums minus the charges deducted from your
premiums.]

you will need to pay these premium levels for the entire duration of the
guarantee. We will test your Policy on each monthly anniversary or upon the
Policy lapse date (depending on state requirements) to verify that you have
paid the minimum premium (after taking into account partial withdrawals and
outstanding Policy loans) to keep the guarantee in force.

The level of premium to keep the guaranteed minimum death benefit in effect
varies based on several factors including:

 . Duration of the guarantee (generally higher levels are required for longer
  durations).

 . Specified face amount (generally higher levels are required for higher
  amounts).

 . Smoking class and underwriting class (generally higher levels are required
  for classes that we consider to pose a greater mortality risk ).

 . Death benefit option (generally higher levels are required for death benefit
  options B and CI).

 . Except for Policies issued in New York, Policy riders (generally higher
  levels are required if you have riders in force).

Maximum and Minimum Premium Payments

 . During the first Policy year you must pay an amount of premium that we call
  the minimum initial premium or we will terminate your Policy after the grace
  period.

 . After the first Policy year, your voluntary planned periodic payments must be
  at least:

 . $200 annually (except that some Policies distributed by certain brokers
   must be at least $2,500)

 . $100 semi-annually

 . $15 on a "check-o-matic" or other systematic payment schedule.

 . Unscheduled premium payments must be at least $250 each.

 . You may not pay premiums that exceed tax law premium limitations for life
  insurance policies. We will return any amounts that exceed these limits
  except that we will keep any amounts that are required to keep the Policy
  from terminating. We will let you make premium payments that would turn your
  Policy into a modified endowment contract, but we will tell you of this
  status in your annual statement, and if possible, we will tell you how to
  reverse the status.

Allocating Net Premiums

We will allocate your net premiums to the Fixed Account from the Investment
Start Date until 20 days after such date. We will then allocate your cash value
according to your net premium allocation instructions in your application. You
can instruct us to allocate your net premiums among the Fixed Account and the
investment divisions. The percentage of your net premium allocation into each
of these investment options must be a minimum of 1% and in whole numbers. You
can change your allocations (effective after the 20th day referred to above) at
any time by giving us written notification at our Designated Office or in
another manner that we permit.

Policy Termination and Reinstatement

Termination: We will terminate your Policy without any cash surrender value if:

 . The cash surrender value is less than the monthly deduction;

                                       20
<PAGE>

 . No minimum guaranteed death benefit is in effect; and


 . We do not receive a sufficient premium payment within the 61-day grace period
  to cover two monthly deductions. We will mail you notice if any grace period
  starts.

Reinstatement: Upon your request, we will reinstate your Policy (without
reinstating the guaranteed minimum death benefit or any amounts in a Policy
loan account), subject to certain terms and conditions that the Policy
provides. We must receive your request within 3 years (or within a longer
period if required by state law) after the end of the grace period and before
the Final Date. You also must provide us:

 . A written application for reinstatement (the date we approve the application
  will be the effective date of the reinstatement).

 . Evidence of insurability that we find satisfactory.

 . An additional premium amount that the Policy prescribes for this purpose.

Charges and Deductions

The Policy charges compensate us for our expenses and risks. Any distinctions
we make about the specific purposes of the different charges are imprecise, and
we are free to keep and use our revenues or profits for any other purpose,
including paying any of our costs and expenses in connection with the Policies.
The following sets forth additional information about some (but not all) of the
Policy charges.

[SIDEBAR: Carefully review the "Table of Charges and Expenses" in the "Summary",
which sets forth the charges that you pay under your Policy.]

Charge for average expected state taxes attributable to premiums: We make this
charge to reimburse us for the state premium taxes that we must pay on premiums
we receive. Premium taxes vary from state to state and currently range from 0
to 3.5%. Our charge approximates the average tax rate we expect to pay on
premiums we receive from all states.

Charges included in the Monthly Deduction: At issue, or within 30 days of any
Policy anniversary, you can choose to have the monthly deduction taken from
either: (a) the Fixed Account and each investment division in which you have
cash value in the same proportion as your cash value is allocated among these
options at the beginning of the policy month; or (b) if there is sufficient
cash value, entirely from your Fixed Account. If no election is made or if
amounts in the Fixed Account are insufficient, we will take the monthly
deduction in accordance with (a). We deduct the monthly deductions as of each
monthly anniversary beginning as of the Date of Policy.

 . Cost of term insurance: This charge varies monthly based on many factors.
  Each month, we determine the charge by multiplying your cost of insurance
  rates by the term insurance amount.

 . The term insurance amount is the death benefit at the beginning of the
   Policy month divided by a discount factor to account for an assumed return;
   minus the cash value at the beginning of the Policy month after deduction
   of all other applicable charges. Factors that affect the term insurance
   amount include the specified face amount, the cash value and the death
   benefit you choose (generally, the term insurance amount will be higher for
   options B and CI).

 . The term insurance rate is based on our expectations as to future
   experience, taking into account the insured's sex (if permitted by law),

                                       21
<PAGE>

  age and rate class. The rates will never exceed the guaranteed rates, which
  are based on certain 1980 Commissioners Standard Ordinary Mortality Tables
  and the insured's sex, age and smoking status. Our current rates are lower
  than the maximums in most cases. We review our rates periodically and may
  adjust them, but we will apply the same rates to everyone who has had their
  Policy for the same amount of time and who is the same age, sex and rate
  class. As a general rule, the cost of insurance rate increases each year you
  own your Policy, as the insured's age increases.

  . Rate class relates to the level of mortality risk we assume with respect
    to an insured. It can be the standard rate class, or one that is higher
    or lower (and if the insured is 18 or older, we divide rate class by
    smoking status). The insured's rate class will affect your cost of term
    insurance. You can also have more than one rate class in effect, if the
    insured's rate class has changed and you change your specified face
    amount. A better rate class will lower the cost of term insurance on your
    entire Policy and a worse rate class will affect the portion of your cost
    of term insurance charge attributable to the specified face amount
    increase.


 . Administration charge: We make this monthly charge primarily to compensate
   us for expenses we incur in the administration of the Policy, and also, in
   the first year, our underwriting and start-up expenses.

 . Mortality and expense risk charge: We make this monthly charge primarily to
   compensate us for:

  . mortality risks that insureds may live for a shorter period than we
    expect; and

  . expense risks that our issuing and administrative expenses may be higher
    than we expect.

If our estimates are correct, we will realize a profit from this charge,
otherwise, we could incur a loss.

Surrender charge

[SIDEBAR: Your Policy sets forth the maximum surrender charges to which your
cash value could be subject.]

The method by which we calculate the surrender charges that apply under certain
circumstances is complex, because they are based on several factors that are
specific to your Policy. You can request a personalized illustration that will
show you how this charge (along with other charges plus your loans and accrued
interest) affect your cash surrender value. We have summarized the basic
principles used to determine the surrender charges in the table that appears
under "Summary--Table of Charges and Expenses." The discussion that follows
gives additional detail on how we calculate surrender charges.

In order to determine the Surrender Charge, we first determine the:

 . Surrender Charge Measure, which is:

 . For the first Policy year the lesser of:

   (A) actual cumulative premiums paid; and

   (B) the Maximum Surrender Charge Premium.

 . For the second Policy year and later Policy years, the lesser of:

   (A) actual cumulative premiums paid within the first two Policy years;
      and

   (B) the Maximum Surrender Charge Premium.

                                       22
<PAGE>

 .Increase Surrender Charge Measure, which is:

 . For the first year following the increase, the lesser of:

   (A) the amount by which the actual cumulative premiums paid within twelve
      months following the date of the application for the specified face
      amount increase exceeds the sum of:

     (i) the Surrender Charge Measure for the first Policy year, plus

     (ii) the Increase Surrender Charge Measure for the first year
        following any prior increases; and

   (B) the Maximum Surrender Charge Premium at the time of the increase.

 . For the second Policy year and later following the increase, the lesser of:

   (A) the amount by which actual cumulative premiums paid within twenty-
      four months following the date of the application for the specified
      face amount increase exceeds the sum of:

     (i) the Surrender Charge Measure for the second Policy year, plus

     (ii) the Increase Surrender Charge Measure for the second year
        following any prior increases; and

   (B) the Maximum Surrender Charge Premium for the second Policy year
      following the increase.

 . Maximum Surrender Charge Premium, which is the amount determined at issue (or
  for a specified face amount increase, at the time of the increase) which will
  not exceed:

 . For the first Policy year, or the first year after the increase, 75% of the
   Smoker Federal Guideline Annual Premium for Death Benefit Option A and all
   riders at issue, or at the time of the increase, respectively; and

 . For the second Policy year and thereafter, or the second and later years
   after the increase, 100% of the Smoker Federal Guideline Annual Premium for
   Death Benefit Option A and all riders at issue or at the time of the
   increase.

[SIDEBAR: There is no surrender charge on partial withdrawals of up to 10% of
the Policy's Cash Value each year.]

 . Federal Guideline Annual Premium, which is the level annual amount of premium
  that you would need to pay through the Final Date of your Policy for the
  specified face amount of your Policy if we set your premiums both as to
  timing and amount, based on:

 . the 1980 Commissioners Standard Ordinary Mortality Tables;

 . net investment earnings at an annual effective rate of 4%; and

 . fees and charges as set forth in your Policy and Policy riders.

This premium is based on the insured's age, sex, smoking status and rate class
and is generally higher for older ages, for males, for smokers and for those in
a higher rate class.

Using the above determinations, we will then compute the full surrender charge
by first locating the Policy year in the table below that contains the date as
of which we are computing the charge. Then we multiply the indicated percentage
by the then-applicable Surrender Charge Measure. This gives us the surrender
charge for the initial specified face amount. We compute the surrender charge
for each specified face amount increase that is then in effect by a similar
method, except that we multiply the percentage for the actual year following
the date of the increase by the Increase

                                       23
<PAGE>

Surrender Charge Measure for that increase. By totaling the surrender charge we
compute for the original specified face amount with any that we compute for
each specified face amount increase, we arrive at the full surrender charge.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
  Policy year
  (or actual
  year since
  Specified
  Face Amount                                                               16 and
  Increase)      1   2   3   4   5  6*   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15  later
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <S>           <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
  % of Measure  100 100  90  80  70  60  54  48  42  36  30  24  18  12   6    0
</TABLE>

*After the fifth year, the surrender charges will decrease each Policy month.

We deduct any surrender charge that results from a partial withdrawal or
specified face amount decrease from the same sources as we take the monthly
deduction. If the cash value is insufficient, we reduce the amount we pay you.
Because of the surrender charge, your Policy will probably not have any cash
surrender value for at least the first Policy year unless you pay significantly
more than the Minimum Initial Premium. Since the Surrender Charge Measure and
Increase Surrender Charge Measure are capped at the end of the first two Policy
years after issue, and after increase in specified face amount, respectively,
you may be able to limit your surrender charges by limiting your premium
payments to levels necessary to keep the Policy and the guaranteed minimum
death benefit in effect.

Federal Tax Matters

The following is a brief summary of some tax rules that may apply to your
Policy. You should consult with your own tax advisor to find out how taxes can
affect your benefits and rights under your Policy, especially before you make
unscheduled premium payments, change your specified face amount, change your
death benefit option, change coverage provided by riders, take a loan or
withdrawal, or assign or surrender the Policy.

The Policy

[SIDEBAR: You should consult with your own tax advisor to find out how taxes can
affect your benefits and rights under your Policy.]

Insurance proceeds

 . Generally excludable from your beneficiary's gross income.

 . The proceeds may be subject to federal estate tax: (i) if paid to the
  insured's estate; or (ii) if paid to a different beneficiary if the insured
  possessed incidents of ownership at or within three years before death.

 . If you die before the insured, the value of your Policy (determined under IRS
  rules) is included in your estate and may be subject to federal estate tax.

 . Whether or not any federal estate tax is due is based on a number of factors
  including the estate size.

Cash value (if your Policy is not a modified endowment contract)


 . You are generally not taxed on your cash value until you withdraw it,
  surrender your Policy or receive a distribution on the Final Date. In these
  cases, you are generally permitted to take withdrawals up to the amount of
  premiums paid without any tax consequences. However, withdrawals will be
  subject to income tax after you have received amounts equal to the total
  premiums you paid. Somewhat different rules apply in the first 15 Policy
  years, when a distribution may be subject to tax if there is a gain in your
  Policy (which is generally when your cash value exceeds the

                                       24
<PAGE>

 cumulative premiums you paid). Finally, if your Policy is part of a collateral
 assignment equity split dollar arrangement, there is a risk that increases in
 cash value may be taxed annually.

Loans

 . Loan amounts received will generally not be subject to income tax, unless
  your Policy is or becomes a modified endowment contract or terminates.

 . Interest on loans is generally not deductible. For businesses that own a
  Policy, at least part of the interest deduction unrelated to the Policy may
  be disallowed unless the insured is a 20% owner, officer, director or
  employee of the business.

 . If your Policy terminates (upon surrender, cancellation, lapse or the Final
  Date) while any Policy loan is outstanding, the amount of the loan plus
  accrued interest thereon will be deemed to be a "distribution" to you. Any
  such distribution will have the same tax consequences as any other Policy
  distribution.

Modified Endowment Contracts

These contracts are life insurance contracts where the premiums paid during the
first 7 years after the Policy is issued, or after a material change in the
Policy, exceeds tax law limits referred to as the "7-pay test." Material
changes in the Policy, include changes in the level of benefits and certain
other changes to your Policy after the issue date. Reductions in benefits
during a 7-pay period may cause your Policy to become a modified endowment
contract. Generally, a life insurance policy that is received in exchange for a
modified endowment contract will also be considered a modified endowment
contract.

If your Policy is considered a modified endowment contract the following
applies:

 . The death benefit will generally be income tax free to your beneficiary, as
  discussed above.

 . Amounts withdrawn or distributed before the insured's death, including loans,
  assignments and pledges, are (to the extent of any gains on your policy)
  treated as income first and subject to income tax. All modified endowment
  contracts you purchase from us and our affiliates during the same calendar
  year are treated as a single contract for purposes of determining the amount
  of any such income.


 . An additional 10% income tax generally applies to the taxable portion of the
  amounts received before age 59 1/2, except generally if you are disabled or
  the distribution is part of a series of substantially equal periodic
  payments.

Diversification

In order for your Policy to qualify as life insurance, we must comply with
certain diversification standards with respect to the investments underlying
the Policy. We believe that we satisfy and will continue to satisfy these
diversification standards. Inadvertent failure to meet these standards may be
able to be corrected. Failure to meet these standards would result in immediate
taxation to Policy owners of gains under their Policies.

Changes to tax rules and interpretations

Changes in applicable tax rules and interpretations can adversely affect the
tax treatment of your Policy. These changes may take effect retroactively.

                                       25
<PAGE>


We reserve the right to amend the Policy in any way necessary to avoid any
adverse tax treatment. Examples of changes that could create adverse tax
consequences include:

 . Possible taxation of cash value transfers.

 . Possible taxation as if you were the owner of your allocable portion of the
  Separate Account's assets.

 . Possible limits on the number of investment funds available or the frequency
  of transfers among them.

 . Possible changes in the tax treatment of Policy benefits and rights.

Our taxation

In general ,we don't expect to incur federal, state or local taxes upon the
earnings or realize capital gains attributable to the assets in the Separate
Account relating to the Policies' cash surrender value. If we do incur such
taxes, we reserve the right to charge the cash value allocated to the Separate
Account for these taxes.

Showing Performance

We may advertise or otherwise show:

 . Investment division performance ranking and rating information as it compares
  among similar investments as compiled by independent organizations.

 . Comparisons of the investment divisions with performance of similar
  investments and appropriate indices.

 . Our insurance company ratings that are assigned by independent rating
  agencies and that are relevant when considering our ability to honor our
  guarantees.

 . Personalized illustrations based on historical Separate Account performance.

UL I Exchange Program

On or about July 1, 2000, owners of certain eligible UL I (flexible premium
life insurance policies issued by Metlife and one of its affiliates) will be
notified that they may exchange their existing policy for a UL 2001 Policy. The
new UL 2001 Policy will have the same provisions as described in this
Prospectus, except for the following:

 . The 5.5% sales charge that we deduct from each premium payment will be waived
  for the initial accumulation fund transfer into the UL 2001 Policy.

 . The surrender charges associated with the initial specified face amount of
  the UL 2001 Policy will apply only during the first five Policy years after
  the exchange. After that time, no surrender charges will be deducted.

 . The Disability Waiver of Premium Benefit (DWP) will not be available on the
  new UL 2001 Policy.

 . In the first Policy year after the exchange, a 25% commission rate will apply
  to any premium increase between the current billed premium for the old UL I
  policy and the actual premium received for the new UL 2001 Policy (or the
  maximum commissionable premium (MCP) for the new UL 2001 Policy, if less.)

 . If you choose to exercise your free look provision during the time period
  described below, we will reinstate your old UL I policy by transferring back
  without charge the entire initial accumulation fund. Any additional premiums
  paid to the new UL 2001 Policy will be refunded to you as described under
  "Free Look Period" below.

                                       26
<PAGE>

Rights We Reserve

We reserve the right to make certain changes if we believe the changes are in
the best interest of our Policy owners or would help carry out the purposes of
the Policy. We will make these changes in the manner permitted by applicable
law and only after getting any necessary owner and regulatory approval. We will
notify you of any changes that result in a material change in the underlying
investments in the investment divisions, and you will have a chance to transfer
out of the affected division (without charge). Some of the changes we may make
include:

 . Operating the Separate Account in any other form that is permitted by
  applicable law.

 . Changes to obtain or continue exemptions from the 1940 Act.

 . Transferring assets among investment divisions or to other separate accounts,
  or our general account or combining or removing investment divisions from the
  Separate Account.


 . Substituting Fund shares in an investment division for shares of another
  portfolio of a Fund or another fund or investment permitted by law.

 . Changing the way we assess charges without exceeding the aggregate amount of
  the Policy's guaranteed maximum charges.

 . Making any necessary technical changes to the Policy to conform it to the
  changes we have made.

Other Policy Provisions

[SIDEBAR: Carefully review your Policy which contains a full discussion of all
its provisions.]

You should read your Policy for a full discussion of its provisions. The
following is a brief discussion of some of the provisions that you should
consider:

Free Look Period

You can return the Policy during this period. The period is the later of:

 . 10 days after you receive the Policy (unless state law requires your Policy
  to specify a longer specified period); and

 . 45 days after we receive Part A of the completed application.


If you return your Policy, we will send you a complete refund of any premiums
paid (or cash value plus any charges deducted if state law requires) within
seven days.

Incontestability

We will not contest:

 . Your Policy after 2 Policy years from issue or reinstatement (excluding
  riders added later).
 . An increase in a death benefit after it has been in effect for two years.

Suicide

If the insured commits suicide within the first two Policy years (or another
period required by state law), your beneficiary will receive all premiums paid
(without interest), less any outstanding loans (plus accrued interest) and
withdrawals taken. Similarly, we will pay the beneficiary only the cost of any
increase in specified face amount if the insured commits suicide within two
years of such increase.

                                       27
<PAGE>

Age and Sex

We will adjust benefits to reflect the correct age and sex of the insured, if
this information isn't correct in the Policy application.


Assignment and Change in Ownership


You can assign your Policy as collateral if you notify us in writing. The
assignment or release of the assignment is effective when it is recorded at
the Designated Office. We are not responsible for determining the validity of
the assignment or its release. Also, there could be serious adverse tax
consequences to you or your beneficiary, so you should consult with your tax
adviser before making any change of ownership or other assignment.

Payment and Deferment

[SIDEBAR: Under certain situations, we may defer payments.]

Generally, we will pay or transfer amounts from the Separate Account within
seven days after the Date of Receipt of all necessary documentation required
for such payment or transfer. We can defer this if:

 . The New York Stock Exchange has an unscheduled closing.

 . There is an emergency so that we could not reasonably determine the
  investment experience of a Policy.

 . The Securities and Exchange Commission by order permits us do so for the
  protection of Policy owners (provided that the delay is permitted under New
  York State insurance law and regulations).

 . With respect to the insurance proceeds, if entitlement to a payment is being
  questioned or is uncertain.

 . We are paying amounts attributable to a check. In that case we can wait for
  a reasonable time (15 days or less) to let the check clear.

We currently pay interest on the amount of insurance proceeds at 6% per year
(or higher if state law requires) from the date of death until the date we pay
the benefit.

Dividends

The Policy is "nonparticipating," which means it is not eligible for dividends
from us and does not share in any distributions of our surplus.

Sales and Administration of the Policies

[SIDEBAR: We perform the sales and administrative services for the Policies.]

We serve as the "principal underwriter," as defined in the 1940 Act, for the
Policy and other variable life insurance and variable annuity contracts issued
by our subsidiary and us. We are registered under the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 as a broker-dealer and are a member of the National Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc. We are an investment manager to the Fund and may also
provide advisory services to other clients.



Bonding


Our directors, officers and employees are bonded in the amount of $50,000,000,
subject to a $5,000,000 deductible.

Distributing the Policies

We sell the Policies through licensed life insurance sales representatives:

 . Registered through us.

 . Registered through other broker-dealers, including a wholly owned
  subsidiary.

                                      28
<PAGE>


Commissions

We pay commissions to representatives (or the broker-dealers through which they
are registered) for the sale of our products. The commissions do not result in
a charge against the Policy in addition to the charges already described
elsewhere in this Prospectus. We paid no commissions in 1997 on the Policies,
because the product was not sold before 1998. Commissions paid in 1998 and 1999
totaled $4,514,429 and $28,275,367.30, respectively. Maximum commissions are:

 . First Policy Year:

 . 50% of the lesser of :

  (A) Actual premiums paid in the first year;

  (B) The initial voluntary planned periodic premium for the first year; or

  (C) The annual premium necessary to keep the longest duration of the
      guaranteed minimum death benefit effective for a like Policy with
      Option A and the preferred nonsmoking rating class for standard risks
      (or the actual rating class for other risks) in place ("MCP");

                                    or

 . 50% of actual premiums paid in the first year up to the MCP, if:

  (A) Actual premiums paid in the first year are equal to or greater than
      three times the MCP; and

  (B) The initial voluntary planned periodic premium for the first year is
      equal to or greater than one-half of the MCP;

                                    or

 . 50% of the lesser of :

  (A) the amount by which premiums paid in the first 12 months following the
      application to increase the specified face amount exceed the cumulative
      amount of premiums on which a 50% commission has previously been paid;
      or

  (B) the portion of (C) above, computed using the difference between the old
      and new specified face amounts and rating information of the insured at
      the time of the increase;

                                      plus

  . 3% of amounts not eligible for the above commission schedules.

 .Policy Years 2-4: 5% of premiums paid in the Policy year.

 . Policy Years 5-10: A servicing fee of 2% of premiums paid in the Policy year.

 . Policy Years 11 and later: A servicing fee of 1% of premiums paid in the
  Policy year.

We also pay the sales manager of a sales representative employed by us an
override commission based on many factors including the commissions paid to the
representative who sold the Policy and to other representatives the sales
manager supervises.

There is a cap on commissions--a commission paid in any year will not exceed
$40 per $1,000 current specified face amount.

We may require all or part of the commissions to be returned to us if you do
not continue your Policy for at least 2 years.

                                       29
<PAGE>

Voting Rights


[SIDEBAR: You can give us voting instructions on shares of each Portfolio of a
Fund that are attributed to your Policy.


The Funds have shareholder meetings from time to time to, for example, elect
directors and approve investment managers. We will vote the shares of each
Portfolio that are attributed to your Policy based on your instructions. Should
we determine that the 1940 Act no longer requires us to do this, we may decide
to vote Fund shares in our own right, without input from you or any other
owners of variable life insurance policies or variable annuity contracts that
participate in a Fund.

If you are eligible to give us voting instructions, we will send you
informational material and a form to send back to us. We are entitled to
disregard voting instructions in certain limited circumstances prescribed by
the SEC. If we do so, we will give you our reasons in the next semi-annual
report to Policy owners.

The number of shares for which you can give us voting instructions is
determined as of the record date for the Fund shareholder meeting by dividing:

 . Your Policy's cash value in the corresponding investment division; by

 . The net asset value of one share of that Portfolio.

We will count fractional votes.

If we do not receive timely voting instructions from Policy owners and other
insurance and annuity owners that are entitled to give us voting instructions,
we will vote those shares in the same proportion as the shares held in the same
separate account for which we did receive voting instructions. Also, we will
vote Fund shares that are not attributable to insurance or annuity owners
(including shares that we hold in our general account) or that are held in
separate accounts that are not registered under the 1940 Act in the same
proportion as the aggregate of the shares for which we received voting
instructions from all insurance and annuity owners.

Reports

Generally, you will promptly receive statements confirming your significant
transactions such as:

 . Change in specified face amount.

 . Change in death benefit options.

 . Changes in guarantees.

 . Transfers among investment divisions (including those through Automated
  Investment Strategies, which are confirmed quarterly).

 . Partial withdrawals.

 . Loan amounts you request.

 . Loan repayments and premium payments.

If your premium payments are made through check-o-matic or another systematic
payment method, we will not send you any confirmation in addition to the one
you receive from your bank or employer.

We will also send you an annual statement within 30 days after a Policy year
that will summarize the year's transactions and include information on:

 . Deductions and charges.

                                       30
<PAGE>

 . Status of the death benefit.

 . Cash and cash surrender values.

 . Amounts in the investment divisions and Fixed Account.

 . Status of Policy loans.

 . Automatic loans to pay interest.

 . Information on your modified endowment contract status (if applicable).


We will also send you a Fund's annual and semi-annual reports to shareholders.


Illustration of Policy Benefits

[SIDEBAR: Personalized illustrations can help you understand how your Policy
values can vary.]

In order to help you understand how your Policy values would vary over time
under different sets of assumptions, we will provide you with certain
illustrations upon request. These will be based on the age and insurance risk
characteristics of the insured under your Policy and such factors as the
specified face amount, death benefit option, premium payment amounts and rates
of return (within limits) that you request. You can request such illustrations
at any time. We have filed an example of such an illustration as an exhibit to
the registration statement referred to below.

Getting More Information

We are regulated by the New York Insurance Department and periodically are
examined by them. We are also subject to the laws and regulations of all the
jurisdictions in which we do business and, if required, we have filed the
Policy for approval in every jurisdiction in which the Policy is sold. The
Policy and /or the guaranteed minimum death benefit may not be available in
every jurisdiction. You should ask your sales representative whether the Policy
is available in your jurisdiction.

We file annual statements on our operations, including financial statements,
with insurance departments of various jurisdictions so that they can review our
solvency and compliance with applicable laws and regulations. You can review
these statements which are available at the offices of the various insurance
departments.

This Prospectus is part of a registration statement that we filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Act of 1933. The
registration statement includes additional information, amendments and
exhibits. You can get this information from the Securities and Exchange
Commission (a copying fee may apply) by visiting or writing to its Public
Reference Room or using its Internet site at:

 . Securities and Exchange Commission
  Public Reference Room
  Washington, D.C. 20549
  Call 1-800-SEC-0330 (for information about using the Public Reference Room)
  Internet site: http://www.sec.gov

                                       31
<PAGE>

Legal, Accounting and Actuarial Matters

Christopher P. Nicholas, Associate General Counsel at MetLife, has passed upon
the legality of the Policies. Messrs. Freedman, Levy Kroll & Simonds,
Washington, D.C., have advised us on certain matters relating to the federal
securities laws.

Deloitte & Touche LLP, independent auditors, audited the financial statements
included in this Prospectus, as stated in their reports appearing herein. The
financial statements are included in reliance upon the reports of such firm
given upon their authority as experts in accounting and auditing. Our financial
statements should be considered only as bearing upon our ability to meet our
obligations under the Policy.

Marian Zeldin, FSA, MAAA, Vice-President and Actuary of MetLife, has examined
actuarial matters included in the registration statement, as stated in her
opinion filed as an exhibit to the registration statement.

                                       32
<PAGE>

Management

The present directors and the senior officers and secretary of MetLife are
listed below, together with certain information concerning them:

Directors, Officers-Directors


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                       Principal Occupation &                       Positions and Offices
  Name                 Business Address                                 with MetLife
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <S>                  <C>                                  <C>
  Curtis H. Barnette   Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Director
                       Bethlehem Steel Corp.
                       1170 Eight Ave. -- Martin Tower 2118
                       Bethlehem, PA 18016
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Robert H. Benmosche  Chairman of the Board, President and Chairman of the Board, President,
                       Chief Executive Officer              Chief Executive Officer and Director
                       Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                       One Madison Ave.
                       New York, NY 10010
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Gerald Clark         Vice Chairman of the Board and       Vice Chairman of the Board,
                       Chief Investment Officer             Chief Investment Officer and Director
                       Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                       One Madison Ave.
                       New York, NY 10010
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Joan Ganz Cooney     Chairman, Executive Committee        Director
                       Children's Television Workshop
                       One Lincoln Plaza
                       New York, NY 10023
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Burton A. Dole, Jr.  Retired Chairman, President and      Director
                       Chief Executive Officer
                       Nellcor Puritan Bennett
                       2200 Faraday Ave.
                       Carlsbad, CA 92008
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  James R. Houghton    Chairman of the Board Emeritus       Director
                       and Director
                       Corning Incorporated
                       80 East Market Street, 2nd Floor
                       Corning, NY 14830
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Harry P. Kamen       Chairman and                         Director
                       Chief Executive Officer (Retired)
                       Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                       One Madison Ave.
                       New York, NY 10010
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Helene L. Kaplan     Of Counsel                           Director
                       Skadden Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
                       919 Third Ave.
                       New York, NY 10022
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Charles M. Leighton  Retired Chairman and                 Director
                       Chief Executive Officer
                       CML Group, Inc.
                       524 Main Street
                       Bolton, MA 01720
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Allen E. Murray      Retired Chairman of the Board and    Director
                       Chief Executive Officer
                       Mobil Corporation
                       375 Park Ave., Suite 2901
                       New York, NY 10152
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Stewart Nagler       Vice Chairman of the Board and       Vice Chairman of the Board and
                       Chief Financial Officer              Chief Financial Officer and Director
                       Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                       One Madison Avenue
                       New York, NY 10010
</TABLE>

                                       33
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          Principal Occupation &                Positions and Offices
  Name                    Business Address                          with MetLife
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <S>                     <C>                                   <C>
  John J. Phelan, Jr.     Retired Chairman and                  Director
                          Chief Executive Officer
                          New York Stock Exchange, Inc.
                          P.O. Box 312
                          Mill Neck, NY 11765
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Hugh B. Price           President and Chief Executive Officer Director
                          National Urban League, Inc.
                          12 Wall Street
                          New York, NY 10005
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Robert G. Schwartz      Retired Chairman of the Board,        Director
                          President and Chief Executive Officer
                          Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                          200 Park Ave., Suite 5700
                          New York, NY 10166
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Ruth J. Simmons, Ph.D.  President                             Director
                          Smith College
                          College Hall 20
                          Northhampton, MA 01063
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  William C. Steere, Jr.  Chairman of the Board and             Director
                          Chief Executive Officer
                          Pfizer, Inc.
                          235 East 42nd Street
                          New York, NY 10017
</TABLE>

                                       34
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
  Name of Officer*     Position with Metropolitan Life
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <S>                  <C>
  Robert H. Benmosche  Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Gerald Clark         Vice Chairman of the Board, Chief Investment Officer and Director
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Stewart G. Nagler    Vice Chairman of the Board, Chief Financial Officer and Director
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Gary A. Beller       Senior Executive Vice-President and General Counsel
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  James H. Benson      President, Individual Business; Chairman, Chief Executive
                       Officer and President, New England Life Insurance Company
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  C. Robert Henrikson  President, Institutional Business
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  William J. Toppeta   President, Client Services and Chief Administrative Officer
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Richard A. Liddy     Senior Executive Vice-President
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Catherine A. Rein    Senior Executive Vice-President; President and Chief Executive
                       Officer, Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  John H. Tweedie      Senior Executive Vice-President
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Lisa M. Weber        Executive Vice-President
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Judy E. Weiss        Executive Vice-President and Chief Actuary
</TABLE>
- ------------

* The principal occupation of each officer, except for the following officers,
  during the last five years has been as an officer of Metropolitan Life or an
  affiliate thereof. Robert H. Benmosche has been an officer of Metropolitan
  Life since September, 1995; prior thereto, he was an Executive Vice-
  President of Paine Webber. Lisa Weber has been an officer of Metropolitan
  Life since March 16, 1998; prior thereto, she was a Director of Diversity
  Strategies and Development and an Associate Director of Human Resources of
  Paine Webber. The business address of each officer is 1 Madison Avenue, New
  York, New York 10010.

                                      35

<PAGE>

                         INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT

To the Board of Directors
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company:

We have audited the accompanying statements of assets and liabilities of the
State Street Research Growth, State Street Research Income, State Street
Research Money Market, State Street Research Diversified, State Street
Research Aggressive Growth, MetLife Stock Index, Santander International
Stock, Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond, Janus Mid Cap, T. Rowe Price Small Cap
Growth, Scudder Global Equity, Harris Oakmark Large Cap Value, Neuberger
Berman Partners Mid Cap Value, T. Rowe Price Large Cap Growth, Lehman Brothers
Aggregate Bond Index, Morgan Stanley EAFE Index, Russell 2000 Index, Janus
Large Cap Growth, Invesco VIF High Yield, Invesco VIF Industrial Income,
Invesco VIF Realty and Templeton International Stock Portfolios of
Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL (the "Separate Account") as of December
31, 1999, and the related statements (i) of operations for the year ended
December 31, 1999 and of changes in net assets for the years ended December
31, 1999 and 1998 of the State Street Research Growth, State Street Research
Income, State Street Research Money Market, State Street Research Diversified,
State Street Research Aggressive Growth, MetLife Stock Index, Santander
International Stock, Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond, Janus Mid Cap, T. Rowe
Price Small Cap Growth, Scudder Global Equity, Harris Oakmark Large Cap Value,
Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap Value, T. Rowe Price Large Cap Growth,
Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index, Morgan Stanley EAFE Index and Russell
2000 Index Portfolios and (ii) of operations and of changes in net assets for
the period May 3, 1999 (commencement of operations) to December 31, 1999 of
Janus Large Cap Growth, Invesco VIF High Yield, Invesco VIF Industrial Income,
Invesco VIF Realty and Templeton International Stock Portfolios. These
financial statements are the responsibility of the Separate Account's
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial
statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards 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. Our
procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of December 31, 1999
by correspondence with the custodian and the depositor of the Separate
Account. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, such financial statements present fairly, in all material
respects, the financial position of the State Street Research Growth, State
Street Research Income, State Street Research Money Market, State Street
Research Diversified, State Street Research Aggressive Growth, MetLife Stock
Index, Santander International Stock, Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond, Janus Mid
Cap, T. Rowe Price Small Cap Growth, Scudder Global Equity, Harris Oakmark
Large Cap Value, Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap Value, T. Rowe Price Large
Cap Growth, Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index, Morgan Stanley EAFE Index,
Russell 2000 Index, Janus Large Cap Growth, Invesco VIF High Yield, Invesco
VIF Industrial Income, Invesco VIF Realty and Templeton International Stock
Portfolios of Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL as of December 31, 1999
and the results of their operations and the changes in their net assets for
the respective stated periods, in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles.

We did not audit the financial statements for the Templeton Variable Products
Series Fund, the Janus Aspen Series Fund and the Investco Investment Funds,
Inc., of which the investment information for these funds is summarized in
Note 5 to the financial statements. The financial statements for these funds
were audited by other auditors.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP
Tampa, Florida

March 27, 2000

                                       1
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                      STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
                              At December 31, 1999

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                    State Street              State Street
                          State Street State Street   Research   State Street   Research
                            Research     Research      Money       Research    Aggressive
                             Growth       Income       Market    Diversified     Growth
                           Portfolio    Portfolio    Portfolio    Portfolio    Portfolio
                          ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------
ASSETS:
<S>                       <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Investments at Value
 (Note 2A):
State Street Research
 Growth Portfolio
 (10,745,186 shares;
 cost $333,312,756).....  $420,566,549         --           --            --           --
State Street Research
 Income Portfolio
 (5,620,168 shares; cost
 $70,920,972)...........           --  $65,643,563          --            --           --
State Street Research
 Money Market Portfolio
 (3,197,886 shares; cost
 $34,029,917)...........           --          --   $33,075,729           --           --
State Street Research
 Diversified Portfolio
 (13,568,374 shares;
 cost $225,692,070).....           --          --           --   $247,894,193          --
State Street Research
 Aggressive Growth
 Portfolio (5,593,963
 shares; cost
 $149,637,856)..........           --          --           --            --  $215,087,902
MetLife Stock Index
 Portfolio (6,441,446
 shares;
 cost $196,867,091).....           --          --           --            --           --
Santander International
 Stock Portfolio
 (3,175,743 shares ;
 cost $41,292,139)......           --          --           --            --           --
Loomis Sayles High Yield
 Bond Portfolio (541,135
 shares; cost
 $5,032,558)............           --          --           --            --           --
Janus Mid Cap Portfolio
 (3,102,796 shares; cost
 $64,508,142)...........           --          --           --            --           --
T. Rowe Price Small Cap
 Growth Portfolio
 (2,043,071 shares; cost
 $24,804,658)...........           --          --           --            --           --
Scudder Global Equity
 Portfolio (970,303
 shares;
 cost $11,980,830)......           --          --           --            --           --
Harris Oakmark Large Cap
 Value Portfolio (33,250
 shares; cost $310,760).           --          --           --            --           --
Neuberger Berman
 Partners Mid Cap Value
 Portfolio (49,457
 shares; cost $575,293).           --          --           --            --           --
T. Rowe Price Large Cap
 Growth Portfolio
 (96,515 shares; cost
 $1,121,477)............           --          --           --            --           --
Lehman Brothers
 Aggregate Bond Index
 Portfolio (56,961
 shares; cost $565,809).           --          --           --            --           --
Morgan Stanley EAFE
 Index Portfolio (93,368
 shares;
 cost $1,085,242).......           --          --           --            --           --
Russell 2000 Index
 Portfolio (36,094
 shares; cost $410,863).           --          --           --            --           --
Janus Large Cap Growth
 Portfolio (2,864
 shares;
 cost $85,665)..........           --          --           --            --           --
Invesco VIF High Yield
 Portfolio (280 shares;
 cost $3,233)...........           --          --           --            --           --
Invesco VIF Industrial
 Income Portfolio (279
 shares;
 cost $5,827))..........           --          --           --            --           --
Invesco VIF Realty
 Portfolio (200 shares;
 cost $1,500)...........           --          --           --            --           --
Templeton International
 Stock (307 shares; cost
 $6,351)................           --          --           --            --           --
                          ------------ -----------  -----------  ------------ ------------
Total Investments.......   420,566,549  65,643,563   33,075,729   247,894,193  215,087,902
Cash and Accounts
 Receivable.............            20           0            0             0            0
                          ------------ -----------  -----------  ------------ ------------
Total Assets............   420,566,569  65,643,563   33,075,729   247,894,193  215,087,902
LIABILITIES.............       898,400      12,123        2,247       191,488      417,916
                          ------------ -----------  -----------  ------------ ------------
NET ASSETS..............  $419,668,169 $65,631,440  $33,073,482  $247,702,705 $214,669,986
                          ============ ===========  ===========  ============ ============
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       2
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                              Loomis                  T. Rowe                Harris     Neuberger
  MetLife       Santander     Sayles                   Price      Scudder    Oakmark     Berman
   Stock      International High Yield    Janus      Small Cap    Global    Large Cap   Partners
   Index          Stock        Bond      Mid Cap      Growth      Equity      Value   Mid Cap Value
 Portfolio      Portfolio   Portfolio   Portfolio    Portfolio   Portfolio  Portfolio   Portfolio
- ------------  ------------- ---------- ------------ ----------- ----------- --------- -------------
<S>           <C>           <C>        <C>          <C>         <C>         <C>       <C>
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
$261,458,295           --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --    $44,047,550         --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --   $4,918,907          --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --  $113,376,167         --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --  $32,137,518         --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --  $14,467,210      --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --  $296,920         --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --     $592,005
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
- ------------   -----------  ---------- ------------ ----------- ----------- --------    --------
 261,458,295    44,047,550   4,918,907  113,376,167  32,137,518  14,467,210  296,920     592,005
      84,625             0      35,301            0      11,803      30,687   42,578         285
- ------------   -----------  ---------- ------------ ----------- ----------- --------    --------
 261,542,920    44,047,550   4,954,208  113,376,167  32,149,321  14,497,897  339,498     592,290
     248,062       122,989           0      297,416           0           0        0           0
- ------------   -----------  ---------- ------------ ----------- ----------- --------    --------
$261,294,858   $43,924,561  $4,954,208 $113,078,751 $32,149,321 $14,497,897 $339,498    $592,290
============   ===========  ========== ============ =========== =========== ========    ========
</TABLE>

                                       3
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES (Continued)
                              At December 31, 1999

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                       T. Rowe     Lehman     Morgan
                                        Price     Brothers   Stanley    Russell
                                      Large Cap  Aggregate     EAFE      2000
                                       Growth    Bond Index   Index      Index
                                      Portfolio  Portfolio  Portfolio  Portfolio
ASSETS:                              ----------- ---------- ---------- ---------
<S>                                  <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>
Investments at Value (Note 2A):
State Street Research Growth
 Portfolio (10,745,186 shares; cost
 $333,312,756).....................         --         --          --       --
State Street Research Income
 Portfolio (5,620,168 shares; cost
 $70,920,972)......................         --         --          --       --
State Street Research Money Market
 Portfolio (3,197,886 shares; cost
 $34,029,917)......................         --         --          --       --
State Street Research Diversified
 Portfolio (13,568,374 shares; cost
 $225,692,070).....................         --         --          --       --
State Street Research Aggressive
 Growth Portfolio (5,593,963
 shares; cost $149,637,856)........         --         --          --       --
MetLife Stock Index Portfolio
 (6,441,446 shares;
 cost $196,867,091)................         --         --          --       --
Santander International Stock
 Portfolio (3,175,743 shares ; cost
 $41,292,139)......................         --         --          --       --
Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond
 Portfolio (541,135 shares; cost
 $5,032,558).......................         --         --          --       --
Janus Mid Cap Portfolio (3,102,796
 shares;
 cost $64,508,142).................         --         --          --       --
T. Rowe Price Small Cap Growth
 Portfolio (2,043,071 shares; cost
 $24,804,658)......................         --         --          --       --
Scudder Global Equity Portfolio
 (970,303 shares;
 cost $11,980,830).................         --         --          --       --
Harris Oakmark Large Cap Value
 Portfolio (33,250 shares; cost
 $310,760).........................         --         --          --       --
Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap
 Value Portfolio (49,457 shares;
 cost $575,293)....................         --         --          --       --
T. Rowe Price Large Cap Growth
 Portfolio (96,515 shares; cost
 $1,121,477).......................  $1,294,264        --          --       --
Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond
 Index Portfolio (56,961 shares;
 cost $565,809)....................         --    $538,275         --       --
Morgan Stanley EAFE Index Portfolio
 (93,368 shares;
 cost $1,085,242)..................         --         --   $1,245,531      --
Russell 2000 Index Portfolio
 (36,094 shares; cost $410,863)....         --         --          --  $451,900
Janus Large Cap Growth Portfolio
 (2,864 shares;
 cost $85,665).....................         --         --          --       --
Invesco VIF High Yield Portfolio
 (280 shares; cost $3,233).........         --         --          --       --
Invesco VIF Industrial Income
 Portfolio (279 shares;
 cost $5,827)).....................         --         --          --       --
Invesco VIF Realty Portfolio (200
 shares; cost $1,500)..............         --         --          --       --
Templeton International Stock (307
 shares; cost $6,351)..............         --         --          --       --
                                     ----------   --------  ---------- --------
 Total Investments.................   1,294,264    538,275   1,245,531  451,900
Cash and Accounts Receivable.......           0     22,766           0       88
                                     ----------   --------  ---------- --------
 Total Assets......................   1,294,264    561,041   1,245,531  451,988
LIABILITIES........................      40,869          0      23,869        0
                                     ----------   --------  ---------- --------
NET ASSETS.........................  $1,253,395   $561,041  $1,221,662 $451,988
                                     ==========   ========  ========== ========
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       4
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


  Janus     Invesco   Invesco VIF  Invesco    Templeton
Large Cap     VIF     Industrial     VIF    International
 Growth    High Yield   Income     Realty       Stock
Portfolio  Portfolio   Portfolio  Portfolio   Portfolio       Total
- ---------  ---------- ----------- --------- ------------- --------------
<S>        <C>        <C>         <C>       <C>           <C>
     --         --         --         --          --      $  420,566,549
     --         --         --         --          --          65,643,563
     --         --         --         --          --          33,075,729
     --         --         --         --          --         247,894,193
     --         --         --         --          --         215,087,902
     --         --         --         --          --         261,458,295
     --         --         --         --          --          44,047,550
     --         --         --         --          --           4,918,907
     --         --         --         --          --         113,376,167
     --         --         --         --          --          32,137,518
     --         --         --         --          --          14,467,210
     --         --         --         --          --             296,920
     --         --         --         --          --             592,005
     --         --         --         --          --           1,294,264
     --         --         --         --          --             538,275
     --         --         --         --          --           1,245,531
     --         --         --         --          --             451,900
 $96,373        --         --         --          --              96,373
     --      $3,227        --         --          --               3,227
     --         --      $5,872        --          --               5,872
     --         --         --      $1,584         --               1,584
     --         --         --         --       $6,832              6,832
 -------     ------     ------     ------      ------     --------------
  96,373      3,227      5,872      1,584       6,832      1,457,206,366
       0          0          0          0           0            228,153
 -------     ------     ------     ------      ------     --------------
  96,373      3,227      5,872      1,584       6,832      1,457,434,519
       0          0          0          0           0          2,255,379
 -------     ------     ------     ------      ------     --------------
 $96,373     $3,227     $5,872     $1,584      $6,832     $1,455,179,140
 =======     ======     ======     ======      ======     ==============
</TABLE>


                                       5
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                            STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        For the year ended December 31, 1999
                          ------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     State Street               State Street
                          State Street State Street    Research   State Street    Research
                            Research     Research       Money       Research     Aggressive
                             Growth       Income        Market    Diversified      Growth
                           Portfolio    Portfolio     Portfolio    Portfolio     Portfolio
                          ------------ ------------  ------------ ------------  ------------
<S>                       <C>          <C>           <C>          <C>           <C>
INVESTMENT INCOME:
Income:
 Dividends (Note 3).....  $44,038,080  $ 4,181,436    $1,538,117  $20,799,436   $ 4,466,938
Expenses:
 Mortality and expense
  charges (Note 4)......    3,209,889      499,462       241,265    1,973,981     1,429,076
                          -----------  -----------    ----------  -----------   -----------
Net investment income
 (loss).................   40,828,191    3,681,974     1,296,852   18,825,455     3,037,862
                          -----------  -----------    ----------  -----------   -----------
NET REALIZED AND
 UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS)
 ON INVESTMENTS: (Note
 2B)
Net realized gain (loss)
 from security
 transactions...........    3,593,964       15,187       245,673      743,624     1,280,373
Change in unrealized
 appreciation
 (depreciation) of
 investments............   16,515,105   (5,496,396)     (275,023)  (2,237,161)   47,914,985
                          -----------  -----------    ----------  -----------   -----------
Net realized and
 unrealized gain (loss)
 on investments.........   20,109,069   (5,481,209)      (29,350)  (1,493,537)   49,195,358
                          -----------  -----------    ----------  -----------   -----------
NET INCREASE (DECREASE)
 IN NET ASSETS FROM
 OPERATIONS.............  $60,937,260  $(1,799,235)   $1,267,502  $17,331,918   $52,233,220
                          ===========  ===========    ==========  ===========   ===========
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       6
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             Loomis                 T. Rowe                Harris      Neuberger
  MetLife      Santander     Sayles                  Price      Scudder    Oakmark      Berman
   Stock     International High Yield     Janus    Small Cap     Global   Large Cap    Partners
   Index         Stock        Bond       Mid Cap     Growth      Equity     Value    Mid Cap Value
 Portfolio     Portfolio   Portfolio    Portfolio  Portfolio   Portfolio  Portfolio    Portfolio
- -----------  ------------- ----------  ----------- ----------  ---------- ---------  -------------
<S>          <C>           <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>
$12,076,347   $ 6,737,411  $ 384,074   $ 5,416,355 $        0  $  486,049 $  2,973      $13,508
  1,722,924       334,318     32,947       432,040    159,812      86,933      615          627
- -----------   -----------  ---------   ----------- ----------  ---------- --------      -------
 10,353,423     6,403,093    351,127     4,984,315   (159,812)    399,116    2,358       12,881
- -----------   -----------  ---------   ----------- ----------  ---------- --------      -------
  3,899,836       528,185   (159,077)    1,140,427     41,394     272,213   (5,489)         679
 24,029,258    (1,137,521)   384,776    44,344,823  6,830,580   1,937,990  (13,841)      16,713
- -----------   -----------  ---------   ----------- ----------  ---------- --------      -------
 27,929,094      (609,336)   225,699    45,485,250  6,871,974   2,210,203  (19,330)      17,392
- -----------   -----------  ---------   ----------- ----------  ---------- --------      -------
$38,282,517   $ 5,793,757  $ 576,826   $50,469,565 $6,712,162  $2,609,319 $(16,972)     $30,273
===========   ===========  =========   =========== ==========  ========== ========      =======
</TABLE>

                                       7
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                      STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS (Continued)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         For the year ended December 31, 1999
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                        T. Rowe    Lehman    Morgan
                                         Price    Brothers   Stanley   Russell
                                       Large Cap Aggregate    EAFE      2000
                                        Growth   Bond Index   Index     Index
                                       Portfolio Portfolio  Portfolio Portfolio
                                       --------- ---------- --------- ---------
<S>                                    <C>       <C>        <C>       <C>
INVESTMENT INCOME:
Income:
 Dividends (Note 3)..................  $  5,264   $ 24,999  $ 15,956   $13,398
Expenses:
 Mortality and expense charges (Note
  4).................................     4,482      2,156     4,919     1,131
                                       --------   --------  --------   -------
Net investment income (loss).........       782     22,843    11,037    12,267
                                       --------   --------  --------   -------
NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN
 (LOSS) ON INVESTMENTS: (Note 2B)
Net realized gain (loss) from
 security transactions...............     2,027     (1,189)   92,428    10,610
Change in unrealized appreciation
 (depreciation) of investments.......   172,687    (27,533)  160,288    41,036
                                       --------   --------  --------   -------
Net realized and unrealized gain
 (loss) on investments...............   174,714    (28,722)  252,716    51,646
                                       --------   --------  --------   -------
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS
 FROM OPERATIONS.....................  $175,496   $ (5,879) $263,753   $63,913
                                       ========   ========  ========   =======
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       8
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
      For the period May 3, 1999 to December 31, 1999
- -------------------------------------------------------------

   Janus       Invesco    Invesco VIF  Invesco    Templeton
 Large Cap       VIF      Industrial     VIF    International
  Growth      High Yield    Income     Realty       Stock
 Portfolio    Portfolio    Portfolio  Portfolio   Portfolio      Total
- -----------  ------------ ----------- --------- ------------- ------------
<S>          <C>          <C>         <C>       <C>           <C>
  $     0        $ 0          $ 0        $ 0        $  0      $100,200,341
       61          0            0          1           5        10,136,644
  -------        ---          ---        ---        ----      ------------
      (61)         0            0         (1)         (5)       90,063,697
  -------        ---          ---        ---        ----      ------------
       79          0            0          0          32        11,700,976
   10,708         (6)          45         84         481       133,172,078
  -------        ---          ---        ---        ----      ------------
   10,787         (6)          45         84         513       144,873,054
  -------        ---          ---        ---        ----      ------------
  $10,726        $(6)         $45        $83        $508      $234,936,751
  =======        ===          ===        ===        ====      ============
</TABLE>

                                       9
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                      STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                            State Street Research       State Street Research       State Street Research
                              Growth Portfolio            Income Portfolio         Money Market Portfolio
                          --------------------------  --------------------------  --------------------------
                          For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year
                             Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended
                          December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,
                              1999          1998          1999          1998          1999          1998
                          ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------
<S>                       <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN
 NET ASSETS:
 From operations:
 Net investment income
  (loss)................  $ 40,828,191  $ 27,785,410  $ 3,681,974   $ 3,877,871   $  1,296,852  $  1,022,138
 Net realized gain
  (loss) from security
  transactions..........     3,593,964     1,828,922       15,187       239,248        245,673       139,583
 Change in unrealized
  appreciation
  (depreciation) of
  investments...........    16,515,105    38,462,367   (5,496,396)      (12,424)      (275,023)     (384,125)
                          ------------  ------------  -----------   -----------   ------------  ------------
 Net increase (decrease)
  in net assets from
  operations............    60,937,260    68,076,699   (1,799,235)    4,104,695      1,267,502       777,596
                          ------------  ------------  -----------   -----------   ------------  ------------
 From capital
  transactions:
 Net premiums...........    76,267,713    68,697,236   15,797,917    13,501,414     35,768,800    28,800,532
 Redemptions............   (15,563,840)   (9,651,413)  (1,719,595)   (1,455,088)      (296,905)     (292,311)
 Net portfolio
  transfers.............     3,590,588       462,907    2,922,342     2,032,607    (23,898,442)  (12,984,969)
 Other net transfers....   (38,125,701)  (33,909,522)  (6,009,960)   (5,444,551)    (2,027,635)   (2,036,921)
                          ------------  ------------  -----------   -----------   ------------  ------------
 Net increase in net
  assets from capital
  transactions..........    26,168,760    25,599,208   10,990,704     8,634,382      9,545,818    13,486,331
                          ------------  ------------  -----------   -----------   ------------  ------------
NET CHANGE IN NET
 ASSETS.................    87,106,020    93,675,907    9,191,469    12,739,077     10,813,320    14,263,927
NET ASSETS--BEGINNING OF
 YEAR...................   332,562,149   238,886,242   56,439,971    43,700,894     22,260,162     7,996,235
                          ------------  ------------  -----------   -----------   ------------  ------------
NET ASSETS--END OF YEAR.  $419,668,169  $332,562,149  $65,631,440   $56,439,971   $ 33,073,482  $ 22,260,162
                          ============  ============  ===========   ===========   ============  ============
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       10
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                              State Street Research
  State Street Research         Aggressive Growth                MetLife                      Santander
  Diversified Portfolio             Portfolio             Stock Index Portfolio     International Stock Portfolio
- --------------------------  --------------------------  --------------------------  -------------------------------
For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year   For the Year     For the Year
   Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended          Ended            Ended
December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,   December 31,     December 31,
    1999          1998          1999          1998          1999          1998           1999             1998
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------
<S>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>              <C>
$ 18,825,455  $ 17,838,146  $  3,037,862  $  7,473,609  $ 10,353,423  $  5,466,190  $    6,403,093   $      119,967

     743,624       522,086     1,280,373       390,678     3,899,836     2,060,324         528,185          251,518

  (2,237,161)   12,721,568    47,914,985     9,316,026    24,029,258    21,573,004      (1,137,521)       5,740,557
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------

  17,331,918    31,081,800    52,233,220    17,180,313    38,282,517    29,099,518       5,793,757        6,112,042
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------

  54,466,186    48,746,380    41,977,555    48,080,744    80,432,444    59,343,787       8,765,614       10,224,172
  (8,542,813)   (5,712,146)   (6,935,090)   (4,373,459)   (5,037,136)   (2,361,734)     (1,805,287)      (1,153,624)
   2,267,794     2,809,643    (8,586,687)   (6,687,894)   20,459,060     9,729,932      (1,507,125)      (2,377,311)
 (26,640,820)  (23,504,994)  (18,101,172)  (18,773,580)  (31,708,703)  (23,041,439)     (3,575,131)      (3,678,501)
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------

  21,550,347    22,338,883     8,354,606    18,245,811    64,145,665    43,670,546       1,878,071        3,014,736
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------
  38,882,265    53,420,683    60,587,826    35,426,124   102,428,182    72,770,064       7,671,828        9,126,778

 208,820,440   155,399,757   154,082,160   118,656,036   158,866,676    86,096,612      36,252,733       27,125,955
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------
$247,702,705  $208,820,440  $214,669,986  $154,082,160  $261,294,858  $158,866,676  $   43,924,561   $   36,252,733
============  ============  ============  ============  ============  ============  ==============   ==============
</TABLE>

                                       11
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS (Continued)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      T. Rowe Price
                                Loomis Sayles                 Janus                 Small Cap Growth
                          High Yield Bond Portfolio     Mid Cap Portfolio               Portfolio
                          ------------------------- --------------------------  --------------------------
                          For the Year For the Year For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year
                             Ended        Ended        Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended
                          December 31, December 31, December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,
                              1999         1998         1999          1998          1999          1998
                          ------------ ------------ ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------
<S>                       <C>          <C>          <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN
 NET ASSETS:
 From operations:
 Net investment income
  (loss)................   $  351,127   $  241,444  $  4,984,315  $     9,561   $  (159,812)  $   (71,325)
 Net realized gain
  (loss) from security
  transactions..........     (159,077)     (15,746)    1,140,427      178,428        41,394       (14,908)
 Change in unrealized
  appreciation
  (depreciation) of
  investments...........      384,776     (428,334)   44,344,823    4,299,801     6,830,580       455,213
                           ----------   ----------  ------------  -----------   -----------   -----------
 Net increase (decrease)
  in net assets from
  operations............      576,826     (202,636)   50,469,565    4,487,790     6,712,162       368,980
                           ----------   ----------  ------------  -----------   -----------   -----------
 From capital
  transactions:
 Net premiums...........    1,766,270    1,559,975    31,140,404   13,796,446    10,707,741     8,413,079
 Redemptions............     (387,694)     (29,635)   (1,283,943)    (179,560)     (556,621)      (87,656)
 Net portfolio
  transfers.............    1,046,383      180,422    24,344,237    4,280,509     5,288,531     3,021,876
 Other net transfers....     (587,488)    (451,340)  (12,718,059)  (5,121,876)   (3,307,953)   (2,968,930)
                           ----------   ----------  ------------  -----------   -----------   -----------
 Net increase in net
  assets from capital
  transactions..........    1,837,471    1,259,422    41,482,639   12,775,519    12,131,698     8,378,369
                           ----------   ----------  ------------  -----------   -----------   -----------
NET CHANGE IN NET
 ASSETS.................    2,414,297    1,056,786    91,952,204   17,263,309    18,843,860     8,747,349
NET ASSETS--BEGINNING OF
 YEAR...................    2,539,911    1,483,125    21,126,547    3,863,238    13,305,461     4,558,112
                           ----------   ----------  ------------  -----------   -----------   -----------
NET ASSETS--END OF YEAR.   $4,954,208   $2,539,911  $113,078,751  $21,126,547   $32,149,321   $13,305,461
                           ==========   ==========  ============  ===========   ===========   ===========
</TABLE>



                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       12
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
          Scudder                   Harris Oakmark        Neuberger Berman Partners          T. Rowe Price
  Global Equity Portfolio      Large Cap Value Portfolio    Mid Cap Value Portfolio   Large Cap Growth Portfolio
 ---------------------------- --------------------------- --------------------------- ---------------------------
                                           For the Period              For the Period              For the Period
 For the Year   For the Year  For the Year  November 9,   For the Year  November 9,   For the Year  November 9,
    Ended          Ended         Ended        1998 to        Ended        1998 to        Ended        1998 to
 December 31,   December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,
     1999           1998          1999          1998          1999          1998          1999          1998
 ------------   ------------  ------------ -------------- ------------ -------------- ------------ --------------
 <S>            <C>           <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>
 $   399,116    $    82,316     $  2,358        $ 0         $ 12,881        $ 0        $      782       $ 0

     272,213         35,936       (5,489)         0              679          0             2,027         0

   1,937,990        556,946      (13,841)         0           16,713          0           172,687         0
 -----------    -----------     --------        ---         --------        ---        ----------       ---

   2,609,319        675,198      (16,972)         0           30,273          0           175,496         0
 -----------    -----------     --------        ---         --------        ---        ----------       ---

   4,574,226      3,660,518      125,384          0          162,181          0           141,433         0
    (541,665)       (44,451)      (8,780)         0                0          0                 0         0
     985,125      2,251,711      224,137          0          433,203          0         1,037,195         0
  (1,431,966)    (1,263,459)      15,729          0          (33,367)         0          (100,729)        0
 -----------    -----------     --------        ---         --------        ---        ----------       ---

   3,585,720      4,604,319      356,470          0          562,017          0         1,077,899         0
 -----------    -----------     --------        ---         --------        ---        ----------       ---
   6,195,039      5,279,517      339,498          0          592,290          0         1,253,395         0

   8,302,858      3,023,341            0          0                0          0                 0         0
 -----------    -----------     --------        ---         --------        ---        ----------       ---
 $14,497,897    $ 8,302,858     $339,498        $ 0         $592,290        $ 0        $1,253,395       $ 0
 ===========    ===========     ========        ===         ========        ===        ==========       ===
</TABLE>

                                       13
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS (Continued)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                           Lehman Brothers Aggregate        Morgan Stanley               Russell 2000
                             Bond Index Portfolio        EAFE Index Portfolio           Index Portfolio
                          --------------------------- --------------------------- ---------------------------
                                       For the Period              For the Period              For the Period
                          For the Year  November 9,   For the Year  November 9,   For the Year  November 9,
                             Ended        1998 to        Ended        1998 to        Ended        1998 to
                          December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,
                              1999          1998          1999          1998          1999          1998
                          ------------ -------------- ------------ -------------- ------------ --------------
<S>                       <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN
 NET ASSETS:
 From operations:
 Net investment income
  (loss)................    $ 22,843        $ 0        $   11,037       $ 0         $ 12,267        $ 0
 Net realized gain
  (loss) from security
  transactions..........      (1,189)         0            92,428         0           10,610          0
 Change in unrealized
  appreciation
  (depreciation) of
  investments...........     (27,533)         0           160,288         0           41,036          0
                            --------        ---        ----------       ---         --------        ---
 Net increase (decrease)
  in net assets from
  operations............      (5,879)         0           263,753         0           63,913          0
                            --------        ---        ----------       ---         --------        ---
 From capital
  transactions:
 Net premiums...........      93,732          0           139,276         0          214,532          0
 Redemptions............      (1,012)         0            (1,812)        0           (1,472)         0
 Net portfolio
  transfers.............     484,526          0           862,477         0          219,845          0
 Other net transfers....     (10,326)         0           (42,032)        0          (44,830)         0
                            --------        ---        ----------       ---         --------        ---
 Net increase in net
  assets from capital
  transactions..........     566,920          0           957,909         0          388,075          0
                            --------        ---        ----------       ---         --------        ---
NET CHANGE IN NET
 ASSETS.................     561,041          0         1,221,662         0          451,988          0

NET ASSETS--BEGINNING OF
 YEAR...................           0          0                 0         0                0          0
                            --------        ---        ----------       ---         --------        ---
NET ASSETS--END OF YEAR.    $561,041        $ 0        $1,221,662       $ 0         $451,988        $ 0
                            ========        ===        ==========       ===         ========        ===
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       14
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                   Invesco VIF      Invesco VIF                        Templeton
Janus Large Cap     High Yield   Industrial Income   Invesco VIF     International
Growth Portfolio    Portfolio        Portfolio     Realty Portfolio Stock Portfolio             TOTAL
- ----------------  -------------- ----------------- ---------------- --------------- ------------------------------
 For the Period   For the Period  For the Period    For the Period  For the Period   For the Year    For the Year
 May 3, 1999 to   May 3, 1999 to  May 3, 1999 to    May 3, 1999 to  May 3, 1999 to      Ended           Ended
  December 31,     December 31,    December 31,      December 31,    December 31,    December 31,    December 31,
      1999            1999             1999             1999             1999            1999            1998
- ----------------  -------------- ----------------- ---------------- --------------- --------------  --------------
<S>               <C>            <C>               <C>              <C>             <C>             <C>
    $   (61)          $    0          $    0            $   (1)         $   (5)     $   90,063,697  $   63,845,327
         79                0               0                 0              32          11,700,976       5,616,069
     10,708               (6)             45                84             481         133,172,078      92,300,599
    -------           ------          ------            ------          ------      --------------  --------------
     10,726               (6)             45                83             508         234,936,751     161,761,995
    -------           ------          ------            ------          ------      --------------  --------------
         99                0               0                 0           1,166         362,542,673     304,824,283
          0                0               0                 0               0         (42,683,665)    (25,341,077)
     86,070            3,236           5,802             1,524           5,208          30,275,029       2,719,433
       (522)              (3)             25               (23)            (50)       (144,450,716)   (120,195,113)
    -------           ------          ------            ------          ------      --------------  --------------
     85,647            3,233           5,827             1,501           6,324         205,683,321     162,007,526
    -------           ------          ------            ------          ------      --------------  --------------
     96,373            3,227           5,872             1,584           6,832         440,620,072     323,769,521
          0                0               0                 0               0       1,014,559,068     690,789,547
    -------           ------          ------            ------          ------      --------------  --------------
    $96,373           $3,227          $5,872            $1,584          $6,832      $1,455,179,140  $1,014,559,068
    =======           ======          ======            ======          ======      ==============  ==============
</TABLE>

                                       15
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                               December 31, 1999

1.BUSINESS

  Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL (the "Separate Account") is a multi-
division unit investment trust registered under the Investment Company Act of
1940. The five divisions are ULII, IVUL, GVUL, UL2001 and VAI. The Separate
Account presently consists of twenty-two investment portfolios used to support
variable universal life insurance policies. The assets in each portfolio are
invested in shares of the corresponding portfolio of the Metropolitan Series
Fund, Inc., the Janus Aspen Series Fund, the Invesco Variable Investment
Funds, Inc. and the Templeton Variable Products Series Fund (the "Funds").
Each portfolio has varying investment objectives relative to growth of capital
and income.

  The Separate Account was formed by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
("Metropolitan Life"), on December 13, 1988 and registered as a unit
investment trust on January 5, 1990. The assets of the Separate Account are
the property of Metropolitan Life. On May 3, 1999, operations commenced for
the five new investment portfolios added to the Separate Account on that date:
the Janus Large Cap Growth Portfolio, the Invesco VIF High Yield Portfolio,
the Invesco VIF Industrial Income Portfolio, the Invesco VIF Realty Portfolio
and the Templeton International Stock Portfolio. On November 9, 1998,
operations commenced for the six new investment portfolios added to the
Separate Account on that date: the Harris Oakmark Large Cap Value Portfolio,
the Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap Value Portfolio, the T. Rowe Price Large
Cap Growth Portfolio, the Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index Portfolio, the
Morgan Stanley EAFE Index Portfolio and the Russell 2000 Index Portfolio.

2.SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

  A.Valuation of Investments

    Investments in shares of the Funds are valued at the reported net asset
    values of the respective portfolios. A summary of investments of the
    twenty-two designated portfolios of the Funds in which the five
    investment divisions of the Separate Account invest as of December 31,
    1999 is included as Note 5.

  B.Security Transactions

    Purchases and sales are recorded on the trade date. Realized gains and
    losses on sales of investments are determined on the basis of
    identified cost.

  C.Federal Income Taxes

    In the opinion of counsel of Metropolitan Life, the Separate Account
    will be treated as a part of Metropolitan Life and its operations, and
    the Separate Account will not be taxed as a "regulated investment
    company" under existing law. Metropolitan Life is taxed as a life
    insurance company. The policies permit Metropolitan Life to charge
    against the Separate Account any taxes or reserve for taxes,
    attributable to the maintenance or operation of the Separate Account.
    Metropolitan Life is not currently charging any federal income taxes
    against the Separate Account arising from the earnings of realized
    capital gains attributable to the Separate Account. Such charges may be
    imposed in future years depending on market fluctuations and
    transactions involving the Separate Account.

  D.Net Premiums

    Metropolitan Life deducts a sales load and a state premium tax charge
    from premiums before amounts are allocated to the Separate Account. In
    certain policies, Metropolitan Life also deducts a Federal income tax
    charge before amounts are allocated to the Separate Account. The
    Federal income tax charge is imposed on certain policies to recover a
    portion of the Federal income tax adjustment attributable to policy
    acquisition expenses.

                                      16
<PAGE>

                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)


3.DIVIDENDS

  On May 4, 1999 and December 16, 1999, the Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.
declared dividends for all shareholders of record on May 7, 1999 and December
21, 1999 respectively. The amount of dividends received by the Separate
Account was $100,200,341. The dividends were paid to Metropolitan Life on May
11, 1999 and December 22, 1999, respectively, and were immediately reinvested
in additional shares of the portfolios in which the investment divisions
invest. As a result of this reinvestment, the number of shares of the
Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc. held by each of the sixteen investment
portfolios increased by the following: State Street Research Growth Portfolio,
1,168,696 shares; State Street Research Income Portfolio, 357,372 shares;
State Street Research Money Market Portfolio, 148,919 shares; State Street
Research Diversified Portfolio, 1,161,405 shares; State Street Research
Aggressive Growth Portfolio, 126,713 shares; MetLife Stock Index Portfolio,
307,335 shares; Santander International Stock Portfolio, 495,499 shares;
Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond Portfolio, 42,345 shares; Janus Mid Cap
Portfolio, 164,544 shares; Scudder Global Equity Portfolio, 34,867 shares;
Harris Oakmark Large Cap Value Portfolio, 343 shares; Neuberger Berman
Partners Mid Cap Value Portfolio, 1,185 shares; T. Rowe Price Large Cap Growth
Portfolio, 410 shares; Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index Portfolio, 2,648
shares; Morgan Stanley EAFE Index Portfolio, 1,260 shares and Russell 2000
Index Portfolio, 1,133 shares.

  No dividends were received by the T. Rowe Price Small Cap Growth Portfolio,
the Janus Large Cap Growth Portfolio, the Invesco VIF High Yield Portfolio,
the Invesco VIF Industrial Income Portfolio, the Invesco VIF Realty Portfolio
or the Templeton International Stock Portfolio.

4.EXPENSES

  For assets in the Separate Account that support certain policies,
Metropolitan Life applies a charge against the assets attributable to the
Separate Account for the mortality and expense risks assumed by Metropolitan
Life. This charge varies by policy type but will be higher than an effective
annual rate of .90% of the average daily value of the net assets of the
monthly anniversary value of the net assets in the Separate Account
attributable to such policies.

                                      17
<PAGE>

                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999

  Investment information, summarized by investment type and industry sector,
for each portfolio in which the Separate Account invests is presented below:

                        Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                             State Street            State Street          State Street           State Street
                               Research                Research              Research               Research
                                Growth                  Income             Money Market           Diversified
                              Portfolio               Portfolio             Portfolio              Portfolio
                            --------------           ------------          ------------          --------------
                                Value                   Value                 Value                  Value
                              (Note 2A)               (Note 2A)             (Note 2A)              (Note 2A)
 <S>                        <C>             <C>      <C>          <C>      <C>          <C>      <C>            <C>
 COMMON STOCK
 Banking.................   $   82,527,431    (2.3%)                                             $   37,290,000   (1.3%)
 Biotechnology...........       54,963,147    (1.5%)                                                 24,690,597   (0.9%)
 Broadcasting............      296,377,400    (8.2%)                                                133,419,212   (4.6%)
 Business Services.......      112,535,700    (3.1%)                                                 50,496,775   (1.8%)
 Chemicals...............       76,861,100    (2.1%)                                                 34,515,338   (1.2%)
 Computer Equipment &
  Service................      256,218,167    (7.1%)                                                115,412,728   (4.0%)
 Consumer Products.......       41,549,200    (1.1%)                                                 18,585,325   (0.6%)
 Drugs & Health Care.....      199,768,100    (5.5%)                                                 89,658,175   (3.1%)
 Electrical Equipment....      135,638,375    (3.7%)                                                 61,141,725   (2.1%)
 Electronics.............      311,786,331    (8.6%)                                                139,112,337   (4.8%)
 Entertainment & Leisure.       69,260,925    (1.9%)                                                 31,127,400   (1.1%)
 Financial Services......      207,714,472    (5.7%)                                                 93,083,836   (3.2%)
 Food & Beverages........       68,059,775    (1.9%)                                                 30,438,238   (1.1%)
 Household Products......      115,271,300    (3.2%)                                                 52,737,925   (1.8%)
 Insurance...............      122,153,209    (3.4%)                                                 55,087,431   (1.9%)
 Liquor..................       35,878,100    (1.0%)                                                 16,110,094   (0.6%)
 Medical Equipment &
  Supply.................       64,919,375    (1.8%)                                                 29,183,519   (1.0%)
 Multi-Industry..........      157,590,888    (4.3%)                                                 70,569,787   (2.5%)
 Office & Business
  Equipment..............      100,591,019    (2.8%)                                                 45,145,450   (1.6%)
 Oil.....................       78,019,820    (2.1%)                                                 34,877,416   (1.2%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration...       10,186,600    (0.3%)                                                  4,492,675   (0.2%)
 Oil-International.......      148,770,011    (4.1%)                                                 66,566,008   (2.3%)
 Retail Trade............      230,490,362    (6.4%)                                                103,622,031   (3.6%)
 Software................      220,768,794    (6.1%)                                                 99,297,338   (3.5%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services...      166,601,284    (4.6%)                                                 74,851,353   (2.6%)
 Transportation-Trucking.                                                                                     5   (0.0%)
 Utilities-Electric......       29,997,175    (0.8%)                                                 13,395,200   (0.5%)
 Utilities-Gas &
  Pipelines..............       38,584,063    (1.1%)                                                 17,426,063   (0.6%)
 Utilities-Telephone.....      103,491,375    (2.9%)                                                 46,478,737   (1.6%)
                            --------------                                                       --------------
 Total Common Stock......    3,536,573,498   (97.6%)                                              1,588,812,718  (55.3%)
                            --------------                                                       --------------
 LONG-TERM DEBT
  SECURITIES
 Corporate Bonds:
 Aerospace & Defense.....                            $  3,129,248   (0.7%)                            8,007,919   (0.3%)
 Asset Backed............                              13,145,137   (2.7%)                           16,750,976   (0.6%)
 Automotive..............                               7,115,862   (1.5%)                           14,621,369   (0.5%)
 Banking.................                               5,120,913   (1.1%)
 Collateralized Mortgage
  Obligations............                              23,320,293   (4.9%)                           45,392,738   (1.6%)
 Drugs & Health Care.....                               2,903,965   (0.6%)                            6,368,139   (0.2%)
 Electrical Equipment....                                                                             5,032,173   (0.2%)
 Entertainment & Leisure.                                                                             4,307,188   (0.2%)
 Finance & Banking.......                              19,467,181   (4.1%)                           90,280,549   (3.1%)
 Financial Services......                             120,137,416  (25.1%)                          305,430,425  (10.6%)
 Food & Beverages........                               9,895,519   (2.1%)                           12,511,591   (0.4%)
 Healthcare Services.....                              13,325,625   (2.8%)                           28,557,900   (1.0%)
 Industrials.............                              13,357,360   (2.8%)                           58,750,359   (2.0%)
 Mortgage Related........                              11,533,851   (2.4%)                           31,552,849   (1.1%)
 Newspapers..............                               9,744,055   (2.0%)                           20,468,019   (0.7%)
 Pollution Control.......                               1,760,000   (0.4%)                           19,866,031   (0.7%)
 Restaurant..............                               3,089,555   (0.6%)                            3,884,012   (0.1%)
 Retail Grocery..........                               7,162,867   (1.5%)                           20,183,815   (0.7%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services...                              14,952,575   (3.1%)                           36,301,441   (1.3%)
 Utilities-Electric......                              23,188,403   (4.9%)                           35,847,072   (1.3%)
 Utilities-Gas &
  Pipelines..............                               2,508,129   (0.5%)                            6,344,091   (0.2%)
                                                     ------------                                --------------
 Total Corporate Bonds...                             304,857,954  (63.8%)                          770,458,656  (26.8%)
                                                     ------------                                --------------
 Federal Agency
  Obligations............                              33,244,644   (6.9%)                           64,815,085   (2.3%)
 Federal Treasury
  Obligations............                              69,212,535  (14.5%)                          254,049,569   (8.8%)
 Foreign Obligations.....                               9,200,344   (1.9%)                           23,045,630   (0.8%)
 State Agency
  Obligations............                              19,552,778   (4.1%)                           46,617,831   (1.6%)
 Yankee Bonds............                              26,698,901   (5.6%)                           63,191,720   (2.2%)
                                                     ------------                                --------------
 Total Long-Term Debt
  Securities.............                             462,767,156  (96.8%)                        1,222,178,491  (42.5%)
                                                     ------------                                --------------
 SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Bankers' Acceptances....                                                  $ 2,296,541    (4.5%)
 Commercial Paper........      104,406,562    (2.9%)    4,153,120   (0.9%)  46,206,089   (89.6%)     40,162,565   (1.4%)
 Foreign Obligations.....                                                    2,527,260    (4.9%)
 Repurchase Agreements...          906,000    (0.0%)
                            --------------           ------------          -----------           --------------
 Total Short-Term
  Obligations............      105,312,562    (2.9%)    4,153,120   (0.9%)  51,029,890   (99.0%)     40,162,565   (1.4%)
                            --------------           ------------          -----------           --------------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS.......    3,641,886,060  (100.5%)  466,920,276  (97.7%)  51,029,890   (99.0%)  2,851,153,774  (99.2%)
 Other Assets Less
  Liabilities............      (18,570,414)  (-0.5%)   10,959,423   (2.3%)     515,101    (1.0%)     23,257,871   (0.8%)
                            --------------           ------------          -----------           --------------
 NET ASSETS..............   $3,623,315,646  (100.0%) $477,879,699 (100.0%) $51,544,991  (100.0%) $2,874,411,645 (100.0%)
                            ==============           ============          ===========           ==============
</TABLE>


                                      18
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  State Street
                                                    Research              Santander
                            MetLife                Aggressive           International
                          Stock Index                Growth                 Stock
                           Portfolio               Portfolio              Portfolio
                         --------------          --------------         -------------
                             Value                   Value                  Value
                           (Note 2A)               (Note 2A)              (Note 2A)
<S>                      <C>            <C>      <C>            <C>     <C>           <C>
COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense.... $   42,520,747   (1.0%)
 Automotive.............     53,473,320   (1.3%) $   24,293,875  (1.5%) $  12,765,921  (4.0%)
 Banking................    222,504,127   (5.3%)     11,599,213  (0.7%)    35,345,047 (11.1%)
 Biotechnology..........      4,259,062   (0.1%)     24,580,406  (1.5%)
 Broadcasting...........    102,304,763   (2.4%)    113,538,148  (7.1%)
 Building &
  Construction..........     12,908,642   (0.3%)                            1,129,927  (0.4%)
 Business Services......     52,283,928   (1.2%)    128,551,113  (8.0%)     6,578,957  (2.1%)
 Chemicals..............     66,926,188   (1.6%)      5,668,625  (0.4%)    14,809,559  (4.7%)
 Computer Equipment &
  Service...............    344,503,286   (8.2%)    176,966,356 (11.1%)
 Construction Materials.      1,347,336   (0.0%)                            4,145,142  (1.3%)
 Consumer Products......      1,541,270   (0.0%)     15,105,475  (0.9%)     2,347,558  (0.7%)
 Consumer Services......      1,546,791   (0.0%)     22,926,075  (1.4%)
 Containers & Glass.....      4,748,324   (0.1%)                            1,276,864  (0.4%)
 Cosmetics..............      4,566,110   (0.1%)
 Drugs & Health Care....    269,559,821   (6.4%)     33,934,131  (2.1%)    15,475,094  (4.9%)
 Electrical Equipment...    198,603,236   (4.7%)     11,781,000  (0.7%)    11,051,542  (3.5%)
 Electronics............    290,979,817   (6.9%)    205,642,403 (12.8%)    27,888,740  (8.8%)
 Entertainment &
  Leisure...............     31,589,263   (0.8%)     55,319,769  (3.5%)
 Financial Services.....    211,099,391   (5.0%)     15,565,562  (1.0%)    22,770,469  (7.2%)
 Food & Beverages.......    144,392,638   (3.4%)
 Forest Products &
  Paper.................     38,649,761   (0.9%)
 Healthcare Services....        540,800   (0.0%)
 Homebuilders...........      1,209,419   (0.0%)                            2,861,065  (0.9%)
 Hospital Management....     11,657,934   (0.3%)
 Hotel & Motel..........      6,028,073   (0.1%)     11,613,994  (0.7%)
 Household Appliances &
  Home Furnishings......      4,477,880   (0.1%)                           10,469,911  (3.3%)
 Household Products.....     95,206,866   (2.3%)
 Industrial Components &
  Material..............        190,650   (0.0%)                            4,141,955  (1.3%)
 Insurance..............    123,792,495   (3.0%)                            9,968,500  (3.1%)
 Liquor.................      6,651,963   (0.2%)
 Machinery..............     24,637,034   (0.6%)                            4,784,205  (1.5%)
 Medical Equipment &
  Supply................     98,448,956   (2.3%)     15,930,200  (1.0%)     1,710,480  (0.5%)
 Metals-Aluminum........     15,170,831   (0.4%)
 Metals-Gold............      5,671,760   (0.1%)
 Metals-Non-Ferrous.....      2,318,173   (0.1%)                            3,141,599  (1.0%)
 Metals-Steel & Iron....      4,254,478   (0.1%)                           10,929,924  (3.4%)
 Mining.................      3,046,177   (0.1%)
 Miscellaneous..........      4,915,428   (0.1%)                            4,099,931  (1.3%)
 Multi-Industry.........     53,514,408   (1.3%)                            9,173,529  (2.9%)
 Newspapers.............     20,296,141   (0.5%)
 Office & Business
  Equipment.............    192,540,031   (4.6%)     43,779,375  (2.7%)     2,382,141  (0.8%)
 Oil....................                                                    3,253,848  (1.0%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration..      4,313,126   (0.1%)                            2,903,201  (0.9%)
 Oil-Domestic...........     26,869,426   (0.6%)
 Oil-Equipment &
  Services..............     26,067,054   (0.6%)     10,873,000  (0.7%)     3,294,267  (1.0%)
 Oil-International......    174,437,716   (4.2%)                            6,183,861  (1.9%)
 Packaging..............        618,375   (0.0%)
 Personal Care..........                                                    1,790,854  (0.6%)
 Photography............      7,423,620   (0.2%)                            3,030,146  (1.0%)
 Plastics...............                                                    1,642,705  (0.5%)
 Pollution Control......      4,170,830   (0.1%)
 Printing & Publishing..      8,326,516   (0.2%)     21,786,212  (1.4%)     1,419,888  (0.4%)
 Real Estate............                                                    4,807,378  (1.5%)
 Restaurant.............     22,291,487   (0.5%)
 Retail Grocery.........     17,788,649   (0.4%)                            1,661,126  (0.5%)
 Retail Trade...........    258,726,495   (6.2%)    176,908,418 (11.1%)    12,081,931  (3.8%)
 Software...............    306,073,513   (7.3%)    118,954,841  (7.4%)
 Technology.............                             19,159,525  (1.2%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services..    121,104,733   (2.9%)    154,558,970  (9.7%)    11,386,247  (3.6%)
 Textiles & Apparel.....      7,270,147   (0.2%)      8,983,463  (0.6%)
 Tires & Rubber.........      2,933,650   (0.1%)                            1,029,788  (0.3%)
 Tobacco................     20,221,865   (0.5%)                            7,882,048  (2.5%)
 Toys & Amusements......      3,146,864   (0.1%)                              814,349  (0.3%)
 Transportation-
  Airlines..............      9,225,687   (0.2%)                            7,301,153  (2.3%)
 Transportation-
  Miscellaneous.........                                                    3,557,910  (1.1%)
 Transportation-
  Railroad..............     15,390,852   (0.4%)
 Transportation-
  Trucking..............        525,406   (0.0%)
 Utilities-Electric.....     67,540,874   (1.6%)      9,663,975  (0.6%)
 Utilities-Gas &
  Pipelines.............     21,701,498   (0.5%)     13,129,119  (0.8%)     1,526,783  (0.5%)
 Utilities-
  Miscellaneous.........      1,420,319   (0.0%)
 Utilities-Telephone....    306,347,545   (7.3%)     16,136,400  (1.0%)    15,549,318  (4.9%)
                         --------------          --------------         -------------
 Total Common Stock.....  4,208,813,565 (100.1%)  1,466,949,643 (91.6%)   310,364,861 (97.7%)
                         --------------          --------------         -------------
</TABLE>

                                       19
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   State Street
                                                     Research                Santander
                            MetLife                 Aggressive             International
                          Stock Index                 Growth                   Stock
                           Portfolio                Portfolio                Portfolio
                          (continued)              (continued)              (continued)
                         --------------           --------------           -------------
                             Value                    Value                    Value
                           (Note 2A)                (Note 2A)                (Note 2A)
<S>                      <C>             <C>      <C>             <C>      <C>           <C>
PREFERRED STOCK
 Banking................                                                      2,290,901    (0.7%)
 Retail Trade...........                                                        309,734    (0.1%)
                                                                           ------------
 Total Preferred Stock..                                                      2,600,635    (0.8%)
                                                                           ------------
LONG-TERM DEBT
 SECURITIES
 Foreign Obligations....                                                        158,596    (0.0%)
SHORT TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Commercial Paper.......                             154,949,235    (9.7%)
 Repurchase Agreements..                                                      4,097,000    (1.3%)
 Federal Agency
  Obligations...........      1,206,498    (0.0%)
                         --------------           --------------           ------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS.......  4,210,020,063  (100.1%)  1,621,898,878  (101.3%)  317,221,092   (99.8%)
Other Assets Less
 Liabilities............     (4,818,376)  (-0.1%)    (21,058,178)  (-1.3%)      609,779    (0.2%)
                         --------------           --------------           ------------
NET ASSETS.............. $4,205,201,687  (100.0%) $1,600,840,700  (100.0%) $317,830,871  (100.0%)
                         ==============           ==============           ============
</TABLE>

                                       20
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         Loomis Sayles
                                                           High Yield
                                                         Bond Portfolio
                                                         --------------
                                                             Value
                                                           (Note 2A)
 <S>                                                     <C>            <C>
 COMMON STOCK
 Banking...............................................   $     3,252     (0.0%)
 Forest Products & Paper...............................     1,625,767     (2.7%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration.................................       141,728     (0.2%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services..............................        56,250     (0.1%)
 Real Estate...........................................       239,906     (0.4%)
 Restaurant............................................         3,479     (0.0%)
 Utilities-Electric....................................        20,632     (0.0%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Common Stock....................................     2,091,014     (3.4%)
                                                          -----------
 PREFERRED STOCK
 Banking...............................................         8,549     (0.0%)
 Construction Materials................................       129,844     (0.2%)
 Food & Beverages......................................        29,250     (0.0%)
 Metals-Steel & Iron...................................       182,000     (0.3%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration.................................       267,750     (0.4%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services..............................       281,685     (0.5%)
 Real Estate...........................................       175,650     (0.3%)
 Telecommunications Equipment & Services...............     1,400,884     (2.3%)
 Transportation-Shipping...............................        12,000     (0.0%)
 Utilities-Electric....................................       300,459     (0.5%)
 Utilities-Telephone...................................       214,312     (0.4%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Preferred Stock.................................     3,002,383     (4.9%)
                                                          -----------
 LONG-TERM DEBT SECURITIES
 Convertible Bonds
 Automotive............................................       380,625     (0.6%)
 Building & Construction...............................        81,500     (0.1%)
 Computer Equipment & Service..........................     3,458,197     (5.6%)
 Drugs & Health Care...................................     1,967,862     (3.2%)
 Electronics...........................................     1,882,512     (3.1%)
 Entertainment & Leisure...............................       237,480     (0.4%)
 Foreign Obligations...................................     5,617,845     (9.1%)
 Healthcare Services...................................       297,375     (0.5%)
 Industrial Components & Material......................       364,625     (0.6%)
 Industrials...........................................       692,775     (1.1%)
 Medical Equipment & Supply............................       208,050     (0.3%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration.................................       150,000     (0.2%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services..............................     1,094,043     (1.8%)
 Pollution Control.....................................       123,188     (0.2%)
 Real Estate...........................................        91,000     (0.2%)
 Restaurant............................................       357,360     (0.6%)
 Retail Trade..........................................        68,563     (0.1%)
 Telecommunications Equipment & Services...............       442,500     (0.7%)
 Transportation-Trucking...............................       129,600     (0.2%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Convertible Bonds...............................    17,645,100    (28.6%)
                                                          -----------
 Corporate Bonds
 Broadcasting..........................................     1,687,875     (2.7%)
 Chemicals.............................................       292,740     (0.5%)
 Computer Equipment & Service..........................       627,120     (1.0%)
 Food & Beverages......................................        76,402     (0.1%)
 Healthcare Services...................................       976,095     (1.6%)
 Industrials...........................................       912,871     (1.5%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration.................................       988,687     (1.6%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services..............................     3,231,875     (5.2%)
 Real Estate...........................................       409,937     (0.7%)
 Retail Trade..........................................       452,163     (0.7%)
 Telecommunications Equipment & Services...............     5,659,875     (9.2%)
 Textiles & Apparel....................................       333,506     (0.6%)
 Transportation........................................       261,563     (0.4%)
 Transportation-Shipping...............................       626,800     (1.0%)
 Utilities-Electric....................................       705,750     (1.2%)
 Utilities-Telephone...................................       493,000     (0.8%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Corporate Bonds.................................    17,736,259    (28.8%)
                                                          -----------
 Foreign Obligations...................................    11,987,615    (19.4%)
 Yankee Bonds..........................................     6,418,660    (10.4%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Long-Term Debt Securities.......................    53,787,634    (87.2%)
                                                          -----------
 SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Repurchase Agreements.................................       884,000     (1.4%)
                                                          -----------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS.....................................    59,765,031    (96.9%)
 Other Assets Less Liabilities.........................     1,936,338     (3.1%)
                                                          -----------
 NET ASSETS............................................   $61,701,369   (100.0%)
                                                          ===========
</TABLE>

                                       21
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  T. Rowe Price
                             Janus                  Small Cap                Scudder
                            Mid Cap                  Growth               Global Equity
                           Portfolio                Portfolio               Portfolio
                         --------------           -------------           -------------
                             Value                    Value                   Value
                           (Note 2A)                (Note 2A)               (Note 2A)
<S>                      <C>             <C>      <C>            <C>      <C>           <C>
COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense....                          $  1,025,437     (0.4%) $  2,654,542    (1.5%)
 Automotive.............                             2,668,712     (1.0%)      389,527    (0.2%)
 Banking................                             2,779,701     (1.0%)    6,374,730    (3.7%)
 Biotechnology.......... $   42,717,280    (2.2%)    1,622,128     (0.6%)    3,766,838    (2.2%)
 Broadcasting...........    182,450,383    (9.4%)    9,202,244     (3.4%)    4,670,099    (2.7%)
 Building &
  Construction..........                             1,147,375     (0.4%)      514,750    (0.3%)
 Business Services......    152,634,350    (7.9%)   23,868,284     (8.9%)    2,358,915    (1.4%)
 Chemicals..............                             3,291,533     (1.2%)   10,906,382    (6.4%)
 Computer Equipment &
  Service...............    419,901,193   (21.7%)   24,709,494     (9.2%)    3,283,932    (1.9%)
 Construction & Mining
  Equipment.............                               727,050     (0.3%)
 Construction Materials.                               678,125     (0.3%)    2,484,832    (1.5%)
 Consumer Products......                               398,263     (0.1%)
 Drugs & Health Care....     51,178,119    (2.6%)   16,126,810     (6.0%)    5,494,040    (3.2%)
 Education..............     34,102,280    (1.8%)    3,104,162     (1.2%)
 Electrical Equipment...                             5,424,125     (2.0%)    5,874,457    (3.4%)
 Electronics............    255,169,133   (13.2%)   39,158,644    (14.5%)   13,213,361    (7.7%)
 Entertainment &
  Leisure...............     49,936,749    (2.6%)    5,588,944     (2.1%)
 Financial Services.....                             6,797,057     (2.5%)    5,079,216    (3.0%)
 Food & Beverages.......                             1,538,278     (0.6%)
 Forest Products &
  Paper.................                                                       963,375    (0.6%)
 Healthcare Services....     14,559,746    (0.8%)      702,625     (0.3%)      568,269    (0.3%)
 Hospital Management....                               500,656     (0.2%)
 Household Appliances &
  Home Furnishings......                                                     1,246,452    (0.7%)
 Industrial Components &
  Material..............                               856,794     (0.3%)
 Insurance..............                             2,260,759     (0.8%)    4,670,482    (2.7%)
 Lease Rental
  Obligations...........                             1,193,456     (0.4%)
 Machinery..............                                                       151,599    (0.1%)
 Medical Equipment &
  Supply................     14,836,617    (0.8%)    6,020,644     (2.2%)
 Metals-Gold............                                                     4,072,604    (2.4%)
 Metals-Non-Ferrous.....                                                     4,677,775    (2.7%)
 Metals-Steel & Iron....                                                     6,605,028    (3.9%)
 Mining.................                                                     1,744,481    (1.0%)
 Miscellaneous..........                               275,600     (0.1%)
 Multi-Industry.........                                                     2,482,024    (1.4%)
 Newspapers.............                               854,775     (0.3%)
 Office & Business
  Equipment.............                             4,939,347     (1.8%)    5,639,675    (3.3%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration..                               932,512     (0.3%)      683,750    (0.4%)
 Oil-Domestic...........                                                     3,765,288    (2.2%)
 Oil-Equipment &
  Services..............                             2,943,681     (1.1%)    1,531,040    (0.9%)
 Oil-International......                                                     3,368,984    (2.0%)
 Photography............                             1,244,309     (0.5%)
 Pollution Control......                               969,891     (0.4%)
 Real Estate............                             2,692,804     (1.0%)    2,179,844    (1.3%)
 Restaurant.............      1,091,461    (0.1%)    4,051,256     (1.5%)
 Retail Grocery.........                             1,830,483     (0.7%)
 Retail Trade...........     13,244,333    (0.7%)   13,945,028     (5.2%)    1,396,008    (0.8%)
 Software...............    124,501,640    (6.4%)   31,128,170    (11.5%)    7,143,207    (4.2%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services..    473,207,570   (24.5%)   23,235,061     (8.6%)   12,333,669    (7.2%)
 Textiles & Apparel.....                             2,968,687     (1.1%)      575,629    (0.3%)
 Tobacco................                                                       212,694    (0.1%)
 Toys & Amusements......                               478,400     (0.2%)
 Transportation-
  Airlines..............                             1,232,378     (0.5%)    2,112,781    (1.2%)
 Transportation-
  Railroad..............                               824,988     (0.3%)    5,090,951    (3.0%)
 Transportation-
  Trucking..............                               940,175     (0.3%)
 Utilities-Electric.....                                                     7,734,478    (4.5%)
 Utilities-Gas &
  Pipelines.............                                                     1,606,375    (0.9%)
 Utilities-Telephone....     91,101,795    (4.7%)    1,916,966     (0.7%)    8,137,388    (4.7%)
                         --------------           ------------            ------------
 Total Common Stock.....  1,920,632,649   (99.4%)  258,795,811    (96.0%)  157,759,471   (91.9%)
                         --------------           ------------            ------------
SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Commercial Paper.......     44,688,825    (2.3%)
 Foreign Obligations....                                                     5,218,413    (3.0%)
 Repurchase Agreements..      1,914,000    (0.1%)                            6,468,000    (3.8%)
                         --------------                                   ------------
 Total Short-Term
  Obligations...........     46,602,825    (2.4%)                           11,686,413    (6.8%)
                         --------------                                   ------------
LONG-TERM DEBT
 SECURITIES
 Participating Loan
  Notes.................                                                       420,065    (0.2%)
 Federal Treasury
  Obligations...........                               195,140     (0.1%)
SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Regulated Investment
  Companies.............                            12,572,104     (4.7%)
                         --------------           ------------            ------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS.......  1,967,235,474  (101.8%)  271,563,055   (100.8%)  169,865,949   (98.9%)
Other Assets Less
 Liabilities............    (35,438,420)  (-1.8%)   (2,045,413)   (-0.8%)    1,848,472    (1.1%)
                         --------------           ------------            ------------
NET ASSETS.............. $1,931,797,054  (100.0%) $269,517,642   (100.0%) $171,714,421  (100.0%)
                         ==============           ============            ============
</TABLE>

                                       22
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        Morgan Stanley
                                  Russell 2000               EAFE
                                 Index Portfolio        Index Portfolio
                                 ---------------        ---------------
                                      Value                  Value
                                    (Note 2A)              (Note 2A)
 <S>                             <C>             <C>    <C>             <C>
 COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense...........     $ 678,269    (0.6%)    $ 193,539     (0.2%)
 Agriculture & Related.........        69,500    (0.1%)
 Automotive....................     1,110,278    (1.0%)    3,241,751     (3.9%)
 Banking.......................     7,243,688    (6.5%)    8,729,364    (10.6%)
 Biotechnology.................     2,144,522    (1.9%)      193,965     (0.2%)
 Broadcasting..................     1,513,037    (1.4%)      951,178     (1.2%)
 Building & Construction.......       602,606    (0.5%)      444,750     (0.5%)
 Business Services.............     7,088,385    (6.4%)    1,208,099     (1.5%)
 Chemicals.....................     1,803,803    (1.6%)    1,933,527     (2.4%)
 Coal..........................        30,375    (0.0%)
 Computer Equipment & Service..     8,906,921    (8.0%)    1,885,797     (2.3%)
 Construction & Mining
  Equipment....................       264,722    (0.2%)       37,709     (0.0%)
 Construction Materials........       695,375    (0.6%)      920,852     (1.1%)
 Consumer Products.............       329,088    (0.3%)      426,599     (0.5%)
 Consumer Services.............        41,388    (0.0%)      103,263     (0.1%)
 Containers & Glass............       313,969    (0.3%)      145,958     (0.2%)
 Cosmetics.....................                               43,751     (0.1%)
 Drugs & Health Care...........     5,063,950    (4.5%)    4,831,395     (5.9%)
 Education.....................       159,694    (0.1%)
 Electrical Equipment..........     2,139,364    (1.9%)    2,346,494     (2.9%)
 Electronics...................     8,542,542    (7.7%)    6,444,858     (7.8%)
 Entertainment & Leisure.......     1,726,211    (1.6%)      401,596     (0.5%)
 Financial Services............     2,146,995    (1.9%)    3,529,550     (4.3%)
 Food & Beverages..............     1,575,037    (1.4%)    2,170,309     (2.6%)
 Forest Products & Paper.......       919,925    (0.8%)      448,821     (0.5%)
 Healthcare Services...........       914,353    (0.8%)       21,577     (0.0%)
 Homebuilders..................       526,462    (0.5%)      135,410     (0.2%)
 Hospital Management...........       344,369    (0.3%)
 Hotel & Motel.................       454,447    (0.4%)      209,742     (0.3%)
 Household Appliances & Home
  Furnishings..................       735,853    (0.7%)      554,907     (0.7%)
 Household Products............       307,909    (0.3%)       23,221     (0.0%)
 Industrial Components &
  Material.....................     1,976,599    (1.8%)      443,963     (0.5%)
 Industrial
  Development / Pollution
  Bonds........................                               70,720     (0.1%)
 Insurance.....................     3,360,032    (3.0%)    4,037,027     (4.9%)
 Investment Companies..........        38,106    (0.0%)
 Lease Rental Obligations......       436,903    (0.4%)        6,440     (0.0%)
 Liquor........................       205,856    (0.2%)      628,678     (0.8%)
 Machinery.....................     1,854,774    (1.7%)      937,355     (1.1%)
 Medical Equipment & Supply....     2,052,444    (1.8%)      160,632     (0.2%)
 Metals-Aluminum...............        56,888    (0.1%)       27,558     (0.0%)
 Metals-Gold...................        27,638    (0.0%)       17,957     (0.0%)
 Metals-Non-Ferrous............       148,431    (0.1%)      243,787     (0.3%)
 Metals-Steel & Iron...........       794,678    (0.7%)      714,613     (0.9%)
 Mining........................       148,944    (0.1%)       51,399     (0.1%)
 Miscellaneous.................       513,562    (0.5%)       92,534     (0.1%)
 Mobile Homes..................       198,119    (0.2%)
 Multi-Industry................       902,396    (0.8%)    4,241,874     (5.2%)
 Newspapers....................       146,913    (0.1%)        5,582     (0.0%)
 Office & Business Equipment...     1,049,025    (0.9%)      444,459     (0.5%)
 Oil...........................       245,419    (0.2%)    1,824,272     (2.2%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration.........     1,377,606    (1.2%)       74,383     (0.1%)
 Oil-Domestic..................                                7,204     (0.0%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services......     1,199,770    (1.1%)      970,166     (1.2%)
 Oil-International.............                            1,486,992     (1.8%)
</TABLE>

                                       23
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        Morgan Stanley
                                Russell 2000                 EAFE
                               Index Portfolio          Index Portfolio
                                 (continued)              (continued)
                               ---------------          ---------------
                                    Value                    Value
                                  (Note 2A)                (Note 2A)
 <S>                           <C>             <C>      <C>             <C>
 COMMON STOCK--(Continued)
 Packaging..................          95,138     (0.1%)
 Personal Care..............          51,100     (0.1%)       512,187     (0.6%)
 Photography................         308,944     (0.3%)       146,031     (0.2%)
 Plastics...................         136,109     (0.1%)        55,133     (0.1%)
 Pollution Control..........         170,117     (0.2%)         8,788     (0.0%)
 Printing & Publishing......         681,175     (0.6%)       579,027     (0.7%)
 Real Estate................       4,853,008     (4.4%)     1,113,230     (1.4%)
 Restaurant.................         905,844     (0.8%)        63,682     (0.1%)
 Retail Grocery.............         358,198     (0.3%)       678,318     (0.8%)
 Retail Trade...............       3,602,791     (3.2%)     2,263,892     (2.8%)
 Shipbuilding...............         107,250     (0.1%)         6,851     (0.0%)
 Software...................       9,163,883     (8.2%)       528,209     (0.6%)
 Technology.................       1,124,335     (1.0%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services......       7,256,975     (6.5%)     5,713,882     (6.9%)
 Textiles & Apparel.........         994,724     (0.9%)       268,027     (0.3%)
 Tires & Rubber.............          47,500     (0.0%)       246,555     (0.3%)
 Tobacco....................         142,120     (0.1%)       298,673     (0.4%)
 Toys & Amusements..........          36,441     (0.0%)       182,813     (0.2%)
 Transportation.............         195,463     (0.2%)       207,016     (0.3%)
 Transportation-Airlines....         821,011     (0.7%)       431,963     (0.5%)
 Transportation-
  Miscellaneous.............                                   22,388     (0.0%)
 Transportation-Railroad....         462,959     (0.4%)       551,262     (0.7%)
 Transportation-Shipping....         201,838     (0.2%)       399,092     (0.5%)
 Transportation-Trucking....         698,687     (0.6%)         9,013     (0.0%)
 Utilities..................         367,963     (0.3%)
 Utilities-Electric.........       1,548,840     (1.4%)     1,998,232     (2.4%)
 Utilities-Gas & Pipelines..       2,091,713     (1.9%)       462,574     (0.6%)
 Utilities-Miscellaneous....                                  109,089     (0.1%)
 Utilities-Telephone........         310,884     (0.3%)     6,851,920     (8.3%)
 Utilities-Water............         116,150     (0.1%)
                                ------------              -----------
 Total Common Stock.........     111,978,300   (100.2%)    81,773,424    (99.3%)
                                ------------              -----------
 PREFERRED STOCK
 Automotive.................                                   22,424     (0.0%)
 Broadcasting...............                                  152,498     (0.2%)
 Building & Construction....                                    9,187     (0.0%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services...                                    8,865     (0.0%)
 Oil-International..........                                   15,413     (0.0%)
 Retail Grocery.............                                    7,711     (0.0%)
 Retail Trade...............                                    9,096     (0.0%)
 Software...................                                  210,838     (0.3%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Preferred Stock......                                  436,032     (0.5%)
                                                          -----------
 SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Federal Agency Obligations.         996,977     (0.9%)     1,042,652     (1.3%)
                                ------------              -----------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS..........     112,975,277   (101.1%)    83,252,108   (101.1%)
 Other Assets Less
  Liabilities...............      (1,246,645)   (-1.1%)      (897,193)   (-1.1%)
                                ------------              -----------
 NET ASSETS.................    $111,728,632   (100.0%)   $82,354,915   (100.0%)
                                ============              ===========
</TABLE>

                                       24
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              Lehman
                                                             Brothers
                                                            Aggregate
                                                            Bond Index
                                                            Portfolio
                                                           ------------
                                                              Value
                                                            (Note 2A)
<S>                                                        <C>          <C>
LONG-TERM DEBT SECURITIES
Corporate Bonds:
 Aerospace & Defense...................................... $    217,373   (0.2%)
 Asset Backed.............................................    1,114,534   (0.9%)
 Automotive...............................................      656,234   (0.5%)
 Banking..................................................    2,646,073   (2.0%)
 Broadcasting.............................................      459,729   (0.4%)
 Collateralized Mortgage Obligations......................    1,557,920   (1.2%)
 Drugs & Health Care......................................      137,862   (0.1%)
 Entertainment & Leisure..................................      447,900   (0.3%)
 Finance & Banking........................................    1,184,489   (0.9%)
 Financial Services.......................................    5,417,318   (4.2%)
 Food & Beverages.........................................      198,824   (0.2%)
 Forest Products & Paper..................................      902,049   (0.7%)
 Industrials..............................................      138,134   (0.1%)
 Liquor...................................................      468,535   (0.4%)
 Multi-Industry...........................................      712,878   (0.5%)
 Office & Business Equipment..............................      465,375   (0.4%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration....................................      572,352   (0.4%)
 Printing & Publishing....................................      457,777   (0.3%)
 Real Estate..............................................      502,193   (0.4%)
 Restaurant...............................................      457,986   (0.4%)
 Retail Trade.............................................    1,152,172   (0.9%)
 Telecommunications Equipment & Services..................    1,447,723   (1.1%)
 Transportation-Airlines..................................      825,882   (0.6%)
 Transportation-Railroad..................................      300,801   (0.2%)
 Utilities-Electric.......................................    1,364,726   (1.1%)
 Utilities-Gas & Pipelines................................      723,618   (0.6%)
 Utilities-Telephone......................................    1,420,791   (1.1%)
                                                           ------------
 Total Corporate Bonds....................................   25,951,248  (20.1%)
                                                           ------------
 Federal Agency Obligations...............................   57,027,167  (44.1%)
 Federal Treasury Obligations.............................   35,460,210  (27.4%)
 State Agency Obligations.................................      182,909   (0.1%)
 Yankee Bonds.............................................    2,257,967   (1.7%)
                                                           ------------
 Total Bonds..............................................  120,879,501  (93.4%)
                                                           ------------
SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Commercial Paper.........................................    4,535,468   (3.5%)
 Federal Agency Obligations...............................      595,728   (0.5%)
                                                           ------------
 Total Short-Term Obligations.............................    5,131,196   (4.0%)
                                                           ------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS.........................................  126,010,697  (97.4%)
Other Assets Less Liabilities.............................    3,327,963   (2.6%)
                                                           ------------
NET ASSETS................................................ $129,338,660 (100.0%)
                                                           ============
</TABLE>

                                       25
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          Harris Oakmark              Neuberger Berman              T. Rowe Price
                          Large Cap Value          Partners Mid Cap Value             Large Cap
                             Portfolio                   Portfolio                 Growth Portfolio
                          ---------------          ----------------------          ----------------
                               Value                       Value                        Value
                             (Note 2A)                   (Note 2A)                    (Note 2A)
<S>                       <C>             <C>      <C>                    <C>      <C>              <C>
COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense....    $ 3,218,687     (8.4%)      $   822,900         (2.1%)
 Automotive.............                                  1,947,912         (5.0%)   $   260,550      (0.5%)
 Banking................      3,446,094     (9.0%)          851,525         (2.2%)     1,887,612      (3.7%)
 Biotechnology..........                                                                 431,081      (0.8%)
 Broadcasting...........                                  1,537,144         (4.0%)     2,779,959      (5.4%)
 Building &
  Construction..........        813,375     (2.1%)                                       246,138      (0.5%)
 Business Services......      3,166,562     (8.3%)        1,177,100         (3.0%)     2,216,848      (4.3%)
 Chemicals..............      1,192,344     (3.1%)        1,938,494         (5.0%)
 Computer Equipment &
  Service...............        972,969     (2.5%)        1,436,228         (3.7%)     4,917,202      (9.6%)
 Consumer Products......      2,168,375     (5.7%)
 Containers & Glass.....                                    191,706         (0.5%)
 Drugs & Health Care....                                    727,988         (1.9%)     3,374,794      (6.6%)
 Electrical Equipment...                                    439,875         (1.1%)     1,288,125      (2.5%)
 Electronics............      1,815,625     (4.7%)          792,706         (2.1%)     4,235,797      (8.2%)
 Entertainment &
  Leisure...............      1,735,500     (4.5%)          481,500         (1.2%)        87,750      (0.2%)
 Financial Services.....                                  1,618,975         (4.2%)     4,435,533      (8.6%)
 Food & Beverages.......                                                                 341,925      (0.7%)
 Forest Products &
  Paper.................        821,250     (2.1%)        1,103,437         (2.9%)       234,900      (0.5%)
 Hospital Management....                                                                 398,438      (0.8%)
 Hotel & Motel..........                                    368,950         (1.0%)       361,213      (0.7%)
 Household Appliances &
  Home Furnishings......                                    739,200         (1.9%)
 Household Products.....                                                                 922,387      (1.8%)
 Industrials............                                    201,400         (0.5%)       174,900      (0.3%)
 Insurance..............        878,813     (2.3%)        1,890,531         (4.9%)     1,188,617      (2.3%)
 Machinery..............      1,577,063     (4.1%)        1,209,506         (3.1%)
 Medical Equipment &
  Supply................                                  1,241,094         (3.2%)     1,205,187      (2.3%)
 Metals-Aluminum........                                    498,063         (1.3%)
 Metals-Non-Ferrous.....                                    434,125         (1.1%)
 Metals-Steel & Iron....                                    570,025         (1.5%)
 Mining.................                                    107,400         (0.3%)
 Miscellaneous..........      1,785,375     (4.7%)
 Multi-Industry.........                                    458,850         (1.2%)     3,303,693      (6.4%)
 Newspapers.............      1,844,500     (4.8%)                                       192,719      (0.4%)
 Office & Business
  Equipment.............                                                                 340,588      (0.7%)
 Oil....................                                    547,031         (1.4%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration..                                  1,010,250         (2.6%)
 Oil-Domestic...........                                    592,500         (1.5%)
 Oil-Equipment &
  Services..............                                  2,015,375         (5.2%)       238,006      (0.5%)
 Oil-International......                                                               1,476,969      (2.9%)
 Packaging..............                                    686,359         (1.8%)
 Printing & Publishing..      2,301,000     (6.0%)          501,500         (1.3%)       355,081      (0.7%)
 Real Estate............      1,281,250     (3.3%)          535,500         (1.4%)       205,969      (0.4%)
 Restaurant.............                                                                 169,313      (0.3%)
 Retail Grocery.........                                                                 981,221      (1.9%)
 Retail Trade...........                                    611,000         (1.6%)     2,590,426      (5.0%)
 Software...............                                  1,988,325         (5.1%)     4,157,962      (8.1%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services..                                  3,108,844         (8.0%)     2,269,381      (4.4%)
 Textiles & Apparel.....      2,081,625     (5.4%)                                       163,556      (0.3%)
 Tobacco................      1,864,275     (4.9%)                                       264,338      (0.5%)
 Toys & Amusements......      1,765,312     (4.6%)
 Transportation-
  Airlines..............                                    510,313         (1.3%)
 Transportation-
  Railroad..............                                    582,075         (1.5%)       261,188      (0.5%)
 Utilities-Electric.....                                  1,118,050         (2.9%)
 Utilities-Gas &
  Pipelines.............                                    286,663         (0.7%)
 Utilities-Telephone....                                                               2,158,184      (4.2%)
                            -----------                 -----------                  -----------
 Total Common Stock.....     34,729,994    (90.5%)       36,880,419        (95.2%)    50,117,550     (97.5%)
                            -----------                 -----------                  -----------
 SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Commercial Paper.......      1,500,000     (3.9%)
 Regulated Investment
  Companies.............                                                               1,867,428      (3.6%)
 Repurchase Agreements..      1,482,000     (3.9%)        1,854,000         (4.8%)       703,000      (1.4%)
                            -----------                 -----------                  -----------
 Total Short-Term
  Obligations...........      2,982,000     (7.8%)        1,854,000         (4.8%)     2,570,428      (5.0%)
                            -----------                 -----------                  -----------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS......     37,711,994    (98.3%)       38,734,419       (100.0%)    52,687,978    (102.5%)
 Other Assets Less
  Liabilities...........        665,535     (1.7%)          (12,430)        (0.0%)    (1,286,462)    (-2.5%)
                            -----------                 -----------                  -----------
 NET ASSETS.............    $38,377,529   (100.0%)      $38,721,989       (100.0%)   $51,401,516    (100.0%)
                            ===========                 ===========                  ===========
</TABLE>

                                       26
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                    Templeton Variable Products Series Fund

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           Templeton
                                                         International
                                                             Stock
                                                           Portfolio
                                                         --------------
                                                             Value
                                                           (Note 2A)
<S>                                                      <C>            <C>
COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense...................................  $    1,925,333   (0.2%)
 Appliances & Household Durables.......................      43,597,485   (3.8%)
 Automotive............................................      38,876,270   (3.4%)
 Banking...............................................      93,961,811   (8.1%)
 Broadcasting..........................................      11,671,882   (1.0%)
 Building Materials & Components.......................       8,232,097   (0.7%)
 Chemicals.............................................      50,382,806   (4.3%)
 Data Processing & Reproduction........................       9,436,991   (0.8%)
 Electrical & Electronics..............................      86,309,209   (7.4%)
 Energy Sources........................................      61,113,306   (5.3%)
 Financial Services....................................      67,495,324   (5.8%)
 Food & Household Products.............................      22,749,989   (2.0%)
 Forest Products & Paper...............................      21,609,388   (1.9%)
 Health & Personal Care................................      43,531,166   (3.8%)
 Industrial Components.................................       4,125,846   (0.4%)
 Insurance.............................................      63,000,165   (5.4%)
 Machinery & Engineering...............................       7,096,640   (0.6%)
 Merchandising.........................................      30,647,631   (2.6%)
 Metals & Mining.......................................      70,173,353   (6.1%)
 Multi-Industry........................................      52,379,143   (4.5%)
 Real Estate...........................................       1,704,438   (0.1%)
 Recreation & Other Consumer Goods.....................      11,067,926   (1.0%)
 Telecommunications....................................     103,119,516   (8.9%)
 Transportation........................................      51,149,658   (4.4%)
 Utilities-Gas & Pipelines.............................      87,566,150   (7.5%)
                                                         -------------- -------
 Total Common Stock....................................   1,042,923,523  (90.0%)
                                                         -------------- -------
 Preferred Stock.......................................      56,820,552   (4.9%)
 SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Repurchase Agreements.................................      46,236,000   (4.0%)
                                                         -------------- -------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS.....................................   1,145,980,075  (98.9%)
 Other Assets Less Liabilities.........................      12,182,392   (1.1%)
                                                         -------------- -------
 NET ASSETS............................................  $1,158,162,467 (100.0%)
                                                         ============== =======
</TABLE>

                                       27
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)
                            Janus Aspen Series Fund
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         Janus Aspen
                                                       Growth Portfolio
                                                       ----------------
                                                            Value
                                                          (Note 2A)
<S>                                                    <C>              <C>
COMMON STOCK
 Audio and Video Products.............................  $   12,027,000    (0.4%)
 Automotive...........................................       1,586,454    (0.1%)
 Brewery..............................................      12,112,537    (0.4%)
 Broadcast Services and Programming...................     105,648,024    (3.5%)
 Cable Television.....................................     253,832,722    (8.5%)
 Cellular Telecommunications..........................     152,852,858    (5.1%)
 Circuits.............................................     121,198,124    (4.0%)
 Commercial Banks.....................................       8,067,519    (0.3%)
 Commercial Services..................................      30,151,000    (1.0%)
 Computer Software....................................      55,568,330    (1.9%)
 Computer Memory Devices..............................      31,415,384    (1.0%)
 Computers Micro......................................     158,170,877    (5.3%)
 Cosmetics and Toiletries.............................      11,884,925    (0.4%)
 Cruise Lines.........................................      20,701,929    (0.7%)
 Data Processing and Management.......................      37,104,521    (1.2%)
 Distribution and Wholesale...........................      24,791,256    (0.8%)
 Diversified Financial Services.......................      22,502,813    (0.7%)
 Diversified Operations...............................     165,718,684    (5.5%)
 Electronic Components................................      79,706,735    (2.7%)
 Electronic Safety Devices............................       6,334,247    (0.2%)
 Enterprise Software and Services.....................      24,758,379    (0.8%)
 Finance-Credit Card..................................      62,213,244    (2.1%)
 Finance-Investment Bankers/Brokers...................      42,087,398    (1.4%)
 Food-Wholesale.......................................       3,307,287    (0.1%)
 Identification Systems and Devices...................      11,250,562    (0.4%)
 Instruments-Scientific...............................      42,286,156    (1.4%)
 Internet Content.....................................      11,715,741    (0.4%)
 Internet Software....................................      37,657,646    (1.3%)
 Life and Health Insurance............................      72,109,337    (2.4%)
 Medical-Biomedical and Genetic.......................      46,106,600    (1.5%)
 Medical-Drugs........................................      21,339,070    (0.7%)
 Medical-Instruments..................................      10,103,026    (0.3%)
 Money Center Banks...................................      72,862,400    (2.4%)
 Multi-Line Insurance.................................      38,767,246    (1.3%)
 Multimedia...........................................     191,538,881    (6.4%)
 Networking Products..................................     117,238,564    (3.9%)
 Office Automation and Equipment......................      11,390,880    (0.4%)
 Optical Supplies.....................................      15,991,391    (0.5%)
 Pipelines............................................      72,361,869    (2.4%)
 Property and Casualty Insurance......................       7,297,509    (0.2%)
 Publishing-Newspapers................................       8,696,844    (0.3%)
 Radio................................................      27,660,475    (0.9%)
 Retail Building Products.............................      35,819,450    (1.2%)
 Retail-Discount......................................      11,151,245    (0.4%)
 Retail-Office Supplies...............................      20,860,390    (0.7%)
 Retail-Restaurants...................................      75,633,305    (2.5%)
 Super Regional Banks.................................      11,427,330    (0.4%)
 Telecommunication Equipment..........................     180,832,646    (6.0%)
 Telecommunication Services...........................      31,562,024    (1.1%)
 Telephone-Integrated.................................      15,503,209    (0.5%)
 Television...........................................      41,936,217    (1.4%)
                                                        --------------
 Total Common Stock...................................   2,684,842,260   (89.4%)
                                                        --------------
LONG-TERM DEBT SECURITIES
Corporate Bonds:
 Retail Internet......................................      13,019,556    (0.4%)
 Telecommunication Services...........................      15,050,000    (0.5%)
                                                        --------------
 Total Corporate Bonds................................      28,069,556    (0.9%)
                                                        --------------
SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
Repurchase Agreements.................................     217,600,000    (7.3%)
U.S. Government Agencies..............................      74,360,555    (2.5%)
                                                        --------------
Total Short-Term Obligations..........................     291,960,555   (9.8%)
                                                        --------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS.....................................   3,004,872,371  (100.1%)
Other Assets Less Liabilities.........................      (2,889,168)   (0.1%)
                                                        --------------
NET ASSETS............................................  $3,001,983,203  (100.0%)
                                                        ==============
</TABLE>

                                       28
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                    Invesco Variable Investment Funds, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            Invesco
                                                           VIF-High
                                                        Yield Portfolio
                                                        ---------------
                                                             Value
                                                           (Note 2A)
 <S>                                                    <C>             <C>
 COMMON STOCKS & WARRANTS
 Computer Related.....................................    $    20,475     (0.0%)
 Telecommunications--Long Distance....................          1,500     (0.0%)
 Telephone............................................          3,454     (0.0%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Common Stocks & Warrants.......................         25,429     (0.0%)
                                                          -----------
 PREFERRED STOCK
 Publishing...........................................        304,500     (0.5%)
 Telecommunications--Cellular & Wireless..............        445,000     (0.8%)
 Telecommunications--Long Distance....................      1,005,000     (1.8%)
 Telephone............................................        368,083     (0.6%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Preferred Stock................................      2,122,583     (3.7%)
                                                          -----------
 FIXED INCOME SECURITIES
 Corporate Bonds:
 Biotechnology........................................        552,500     (0.9%)
 Broadcasting.........................................      2,861,250     (4.9%)
 Cable................................................      5,033,700     (8.6%)
 Chemicals............................................      1,100,750     (1.9%)
 Communications--Equipment & Manufacturing............        866,000     (1.5%)
 Computer Related.....................................      2,974,625     (5.1%)
 Electric Utilities...................................      2,348,825     (4.0%)
 Electrical Equipment.................................        206,000     (0.4%)
 Engineering & Construction...........................        182,000     (0.3%)
 Gaming...............................................      1,955,238     (3.3%)
 Healthcare Services..................................        740,000     (1.3%)
 Household Products...................................        365,000     (0.6%)
 Iron & Steel.........................................        703,570     (1.2%)
 Lodging--Hotels......................................        225,000     (0.4%)
 Metals & Mining......................................        350,000     (0.6%)
 Oil & Gas Related....................................      2,483,975     (4.3%)
 Paper & Forest Products..............................      1,046,060     (1.8%)
 Personal Care........................................        257,250     (0.4%)
 Pollution Control....................................        895,000     (1.5%)
 Services.............................................      2,530,312     (4.3%)
 Shipping.............................................         95,000     (0.2%)
 Specialty Printing...................................        683,750     (1.2%)
 Telecommunications--Cellular & Wireless..............      2,369,250     (4.1%)
 Telecommunications--Long Distance....................      9,060,975    (15.5%)
 Telephone............................................     11,058,433    (18.9%)
 Textiles & Apparel Manufacturing.....................        915,000     (1.6%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Corporate Bonds................................     51,859,463    (88.8%)
                                                          -----------
 SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS
 Repurchase Agreements................................      2,968,000     (5.1%)
                                                          -----------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS....................................     56,975,475    (97.6%)
 Other Assets Less Liabilities........................      1,403,130     (2.4%)
                                                          -----------
 NET ASSETS...........................................    $58,378,605   (100.0%)
                                                          ===========
</TABLE>

                                       29
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                    Invesco Variable Investment Funds, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      Invesco                Invesco
                                   VIF Industrial           VIF Realty
                                  Income Portfolio          Portfolio
                                  ----------------          ----------
                                       Value                  Value
                                     (Note 2A)              (Note 2A)
 <S>                              <C>              <C>      <C>        <C>
 COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense............    $ 1,589,874      (2.0%)
 Automobiles....................        534,375      (0.7%)
 Banks..........................      4,750,694      (5.9%)
 Beverages......................      1,977,650      (2.5%)
 Broadcasting...................      1,475,500      (1.8%)
 Chemicals......................      1,117,962      (1.4%)
 Communications-Equipment
  Manufacturing.................        972,562      (1.2%)
 Computer Related...............      2,232,056      (2.8%)
 Electric Utilities.............      1,438,590      (1.8%)
 Electronics....................      1,305,600      (1.6%)
 Electrical Equipment...........      1,934,375      (2.4%)
 Electronics-semiconductor......      2,512,500      (3.1%)
 Financial......................      1,111,250      (1.4%)
 Foods..........................      3,215,379      (4.0%)
 Gaming.........................      1,000,000      (1.3%)
 Gold & Precious Metals Mining..        171,500      (0.2%)
 Health Care Drugs-
  Pharmaceuticals...............      6,066,543      (7.6%)
 Health Care Related............      1,027,465      (1.3%)
 Household Products.............      2,176,500      (2.7%)
 Insurance......................      2,640,875      (3.3%)
 Investment Bank/Broker Firm....        999,250      (1.3%)
 Lodging-Hotels.................        772,937      (1.0%)
 Manufacturing..................        996,938      (1.2%)
 Oil & Gas Related..............      5,659,240      (7.1%)
 Paper & Forest Products........      1,426,638      (1.8%)
 Railroads......................      2,285,062      (2.9%)
 Real Estate Investment Trust...                            $ 544,084   (87.0%)
 Real Estate Related............                               16,965    (2.7%)
 Restaurants....................      1,007,812      (1.3%)
 Retail.........................      4,794,062      (6.0%)
 Savings & Loan.................      1,154,156      (1.4%)
 Services.......................        452,625      (0.6%)
 Telecommunications-Cellular &
  Wireless......................        825,000      (1.0%)
 Telecommunications-Long
  Distance......................      1,555,313      (2.0%)
 Telephone......................      4,413,256      (5.5%)
 Tobacco........................        394,187      (0.5%)
                                    -----------             ---------
 Total Common Stock.............     65,987,726     (82.6%)   561,049   (89.7%)
                                    -----------             ---------
 FIXED INCOME SECURITIES
 Corporate Bonds:
 Airlines.......................        293,092      (0.4%)
 Building Materials.............        510,509      (0.6%)
 Cable..........................        355,750      (0.4%)
 Computer Related...............        222,469      (0.3%)
 Electric Utilities.............      3,076,860      (3.9%)
 Insurance......................        425,360      (0.5%)
 Lodging-Hotels.................        218,852      (0.3%)
 Oil & Gas Related..............      1,470,846      (1.9%)
 Paper & Forest Products........        105,624      (0.1%)
 Services.......................         98,500      (0.1%)
 Telecommunications-Long
  Distance......................        151,250      (0.2%)
 Telephone......................        653,905      (0.8%)
                                    -----------
 Total Corporate Bonds..........      7,583,017      (9.5%)
                                    -----------
 US Government Obligations......        712,501      (0.9%)
                                    -----------
 Total Fixed Income Securities..      8,295,518     (10.4%)
 SHORT TERM INVESTMENTS
 Repurchase Agreements..........      6,586,000      (8.2%)
                                    -----------             ---------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS..............     80,869,244    (101.2%)   561,049   (89.7%)
 Other Assets Less Liabilities..       (976,632)    (-1.2%)    64,429   (10.3%)
                                    -----------             ---------
 NET ASSETS.....................    $79,892,612    (100.0%) $ 625,478  (100.0%)
                                    ===========             =========
</TABLE>

                                       30
<PAGE>

                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Concluded)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Concluded)

  The value of investments in the Funds portfolios are determined using the
following valuation techniques:

  Portfolio securities that are traded on domestic stock exchanges are valued
at the last price as of the close of business on the day the securities are
being valued. Lacking any sales, securities are valued at the mean between
closing bid and asked prices (except the Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond
Portfolio, which values such securities at last bid price). Securities trading
primarily on non-domestic exchanges are valued at the preceding closing price
on the exchange where it primarily trades (or in the case of Loomis Sayles
High Yield Bond and Scudder Global Equity Portfolios, the last sale). A
security that is listed or traded on more than one exchange is valued at the
quotation on the exchange determined to be the primary market for that
security by the Board of Directors or its delegates. If no closing price is
available, then such securities are valued, first, by using the mean between
last current bid and asked prices or, second, by using last available closing
price (except the Scudder Global Equity Portfolio which second values such
securities at last current bid or third, by using last available price).

  Domestic securities traded on over-the-counter markets are valued at the
mean between bid and asked prices or yield equivalent as obtained from two or
more dealers that make markets in the securities (except for the Loomis Sayles
High Yield Bond Portfolio, which would value such security, first, at last
sale price and, second, at bid price or the Scudder Global Equity and the
Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap Value Portfolios that value such securities,
first, at last sale price and, second, at last bid price). All non-U.S.
securities traded on over-the-counter securities markets are valued at the
last sale quote if market quotations are available, or the last closing bid
price if there is no active trading in a particular security for a given day
(except the Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap Value Portfolio which is valued
at the mean between closing bid and asked prices). Where market quotations are
not readily available for such non-domestic, over-the-counter securities, then
such securities will be valued in good faith by a method that the Board of
Directors or its delegates believe accurately reflects fair value. Portfolio
securities that are traded both on over-the-counter markets and on a stock
exchange are valued according to the broadest and most representative market.
For debt securities, this ordinarily will be the over-the-counter market.
Securities and assets for which market quotations are not readily available
(e.g. certain long-term bonds and notes) are valued at fair value as
determined in good faith by or under the direction of the Board of Directors,
including valuations furnished by a pricing service retained for this purpose
and typically utilized by other institutional-sized trading organizations.

  Forward foreign exchange contracts are valued based on the closing prices of
the forward currency contract rates in London foreign exchange markets on a
daily basis as provided by a reliable bank or dealer.

  Short-term instruments with a remaining maturity of sixty days or less are
valued utilizing the amortized cost method of valuation. If for any reason the
fair value of any security is not fairly reflected by such method, such
security will be valued by the same method as securities having a maturity of
more than sixty days.

  Options on securities, indices, or futures contracts are valued at the last
sales price available as of the close of business on the day of valuation. If
no sales have occurred, options are valued at the mean between bid and asked
prices. Options on currencies are valued at the spot price each day. As a
general matter, futures contracts are marked-to-market daily. The value of
futures contracts will be the sum of the margin deposits plus or minus the
difference between the value of the futures contract on each day the net asset
value is calculated and the value on the date the futures contract originated.
For this purpose, value is the value established on a recognized commodity
exchange, or by reference to other customary sources, with gain or loss being
realized when the futures contract closes or expires.


                                      31


<PAGE>   1

                         INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              PAGE
                                                              ----
<S>                                                           <C>

METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
Independent Auditors' Report................................
Consolidated Statements of Income for the years ended
  December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997..........................
Consolidated Balance Sheets at December 31, 1999 and 1998...
Consolidated Statements of Equity for the years ended
  December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997..........................
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended
  December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997..........................
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements..................
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   2

                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT

The Board of Directors and Policyholders of
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company:

     We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and subsidiaries (the "Company") as of
December 31, 1999 and 1998, and the related consolidated statements of income,
equity and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December
31, 1999. These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the
Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these
consolidated financial statements based on our audits.

     We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards 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. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

     In our opinion, such consolidated financial statements present fairly, in
all material respects, the consolidated financial position of Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company and subsidiaries at December 31, 1999 and 1998, and the
consolidated results of their operations and their consolidated cash flows for
each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 1999 in conformity with
generally accepted accounting principles.

Deloitte & Touche LLP

New York, New York
February 7, 2000
<PAGE>   3

                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                       CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999, 1998 AND 1997
                                 (IN MILLIONS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               1999       1998       1997
                                                               ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                           <C>        <C>        <C>
REVENUES
Premiums....................................................  $12,088    $11,503    $11,278
Universal life and investment-type product policy fees......    1,438      1,360      1,418
Net investment income.......................................    9,816     10,228      9,491
Other revenues..............................................    2,154      1,994      1,491
Net realized investment gains (losses) (net of amounts
  allocable to other accounts of $(67), $608 and $231,
  respectively).............................................      (70)     2,021        787
                                                              -------    -------    -------
                                                               25,426     27,106     24,465
                                                              -------    -------    -------
EXPENSES
Policyholder benefits and claims (excludes amounts directly
  related to net realized investment gains (losses) of
  $(21), $368 and $161, respectively).......................   13,105     12,638     12,403
Interest credited to policyholder account balances..........    2,441      2,711      2,878
Policyholder dividends......................................    1,690      1,651      1,742
Other expenses (excludes amounts directly related to net
  realized investment gains (losses) of $(46), $240 and $70,
  respectively).............................................    6,755      8,019      5,771
                                                              -------    -------    -------
                                                               23,991     25,019     22,794
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Income before provision for income taxes and extraordinary
  item......................................................    1,435      2,087      1,671
Provision for income taxes..................................      593        740        468
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Income before extraordinary item............................      842      1,347      1,203
Extraordinary item -- demutualization expense...............      225          4         --
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Net income..................................................  $   617    $ 1,343    $ 1,203
                                                              =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
<PAGE>   4

                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998
                                 (IN MILLIONS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                1999        1998
                                                                ----        ----
<S>                                                           <C>         <C>
ASSETS
Investments:
  Fixed maturities available-for-sale, at fair value........  $ 96,981    $100,767
  Equity securities, at fair value..........................     2,006       2,340
  Mortgage loans on real estate.............................    19,739      16,827
  Real estate and real estate joint ventures................     5,649       6,287
  Policy loans..............................................     5,598       5,600
  Other limited partnership interests.......................     1,331       1,047
  Short-term investments....................................     3,055       1,369
  Other invested assets.....................................     1,501       1,484
                                                              --------    --------
                                                               135,860     135,721

Cash and cash equivalents...................................     2,789       3,301
Accrued investment income...................................     1,725       1,994
Premiums and other receivables..............................     6,681       5,972
Deferred policy acquisition costs...........................     8,492       6,538
Deferred income taxes.......................................       603          --
Other.......................................................     4,141       3,752
Separate account assets.....................................    64,941      58,068
                                                              --------    --------
                                                              $225,232    $215,346
                                                              ========    ========
LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
Liabilities:
Future policy benefits......................................  $ 73,582    $ 72,701
Policyholder account balances...............................    45,901      46,494
Other policyholder funds....................................     4,498       4,061
Policyholder dividends payable..............................       974         947
Short-term debt.............................................     4,208       3,585
Long-term debt..............................................     2,514       2,903
Current income taxes payable................................       548         403
Deferred income taxes payable...............................        --         545
Other.......................................................    14,376      10,772
Separate account liabilities................................    64,941      58,068
                                                              --------    --------
                                                               211,542     200,479
                                                              --------    --------

Commitments and contingencies (Note 9)

Equity:
Retained earnings...........................................    14,100      13,483
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)...............      (410)      1,384
                                                              --------    --------
                                                                13,690      14,867
                                                              --------    --------
                                                              $225,232    $215,346
                                                              ========    ========
</TABLE>

          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
<PAGE>   5

                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                       CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF EQUITY
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999, 1998 AND 1997
                                 (IN MILLIONS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    ACCUMULATED OTHER
                                                                               COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)
                                                                        -----------------------------------------
                                                                             NET           FOREIGN      MINIMUM
                                                                          UNREALIZED      CURRENCY      PENSION
                                             COMPREHENSIVE   RETAINED     INVESTMENT     TRANSLATION   LIABILITY
                                    TOTAL    INCOME (LOSS)   EARNINGS   GAINS (LOSSES)   ADJUSTMENT    ADJUSTMENT
                                    -----    -------------   --------   --------------   -----------   ----------
<S>                                <C>       <C>             <C>        <C>              <C>           <C>
Balance at January 1, 1997.......  $11,983                   $10,937       $ 1,028          $  18         $ --
Comprehensive income:
  Net income.....................    1,203      $ 1,203        1,203
                                                -------
  Other comprehensive income:
    Unrealized investment gains,
      net of related offsets,
      reclassification
      adjustments and income
      taxes......................                   870                        870
    Foreign currency translation
      adjustments................                   (49)                                      (49)
                                                -------
    Other comprehensive income...      821          821
                                                -------
  Comprehensive income...........               $ 2,024
                                                =======
                                   -------                   -------       -------          -----         ----
Balance at December 31, 1997.....   14,007                    12,140         1,898            (31)          --
Comprehensive income:
  Net income.....................    1,343      $ 1,343        1,343
                                                -------
  Other comprehensive loss:
    Unrealized investment losses,
      net of related offsets,
      reclassification
      adjustments and income
      taxes......................                  (358)                      (358)
    Foreign currency translation
      adjustments................                  (113)                                     (113)
    Minimum pension liability
      adjustment.................                   (12)                                                   (12)
                                                -------
    Other comprehensive loss.....     (483)        (483)
                                                -------
  Comprehensive income...........               $   860
                                                =======
                                   -------                   -------       -------          -----         ----
Balance at December 31, 1998.....   14,867                    13,483         1,540           (144)         (12)
Comprehensive loss:
  Net income.....................      617      $   617          617
                                                -------
  Other comprehensive loss:
    Unrealized investment losses,
      net of related offsets,
      reclassification
      adjustments and income
      taxes......................                (1,837)                    (1,837)
    Foreign currency translation
      adjustments................                    50                                        50
    Minimum pension liability
      adjustment.................                    (7)                                                    (7)
                                                -------
    Other comprehensive loss.....   (1,794)      (1,794)
                                                -------
  Comprehensive loss.............               $(1,177)
                                                =======
                                   -------                   -------       -------          -----         ----
Balance at December 31, 1999.....  $13,690                   $14,100       $  (297)         $ (94)        $(19)
                                   =======                   =======       =======          =====         ====
</TABLE>

          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
<PAGE>   6

                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999, 1998 AND 1997
                                 (IN MILLIONS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                1999        1998        1997
                                                                ----        ----        ----
<S>                                                           <C>         <C>         <C>
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net income..................................................  $    617    $  1,343    $  1,203
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided
    by operating activities:
    Depreciation and amortization expenses..................       173          56         (36)
    (Gains) losses from sales of investments and businesses,
      net...................................................       137      (2,629)     (1,018)
    Change in undistributed income of real estate joint
      ventures and other limited partnership interests......      (322)        (91)        157
    Interest credited to policyholder account balances......     2,441       2,711       2,878
    Universal life and investment-type product policy
      fees..................................................    (1,438)     (1,360)     (1,418)
    Change in accrued investment income.....................       269        (181)       (215)
    Change in premiums and other receivables................      (619)     (2,681)       (792)
    Change in deferred policy acquisition costs, net........      (389)       (188)       (159)
    Change in insurance related liabilities.................     2,248       1,481       2,364
    Change in income taxes payable..........................        22         251         (99)
    Change in other liabilities.............................       857       2,390        (206)
    Other, net..............................................      (131)       (260)        213
                                                              --------    --------    --------
Net cash provided by operating activities...................     3,865         842       2,872
                                                              --------    --------    --------
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
  Sales, maturities and repayments of:
    Fixed maturities........................................    73,120      57,857      75,346
    Equity securities.......................................       760       3,085       1,821
    Mortgage loans on real estate...........................     1,992       2,296       2,784
    Real estate and real estate joint ventures..............     1,062       1,122       2,046
    Other limited partnership interests.....................       469         146         166
  Purchases of:
    Fixed maturities........................................   (72,253)    (67,543)    (76,603)
    Equity securities.......................................      (410)       (854)     (2,121)
    Mortgage loans on real estate...........................    (4,395)     (2,610)     (4,119)
    Real estate and real estate joint ventures..............      (341)       (423)       (624)
    Other limited partnership interests.....................      (465)       (723)       (338)
  Net change in short-term investments......................    (1,577)       (761)         63
  Net change in policy loans................................         2         133          17
  Purchase of businesses, net of cash received..............    (2,972)         --        (430)
  Proceeds from sales of businesses.........................        --       7,372         135
  Net change in investment collateral.......................     2,692       3,769          --
  Other, net................................................       (73)       (183)        191
                                                              --------    --------    --------
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities.........    (2,389)      2,683      (1,666)
                                                              --------    --------    --------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
  Policyholder account balances:
    Deposits................................................    18,428      19,361      16,061
    Withdrawals.............................................   (20,650)    (21,706)    (18,831)
  Short-term debt, net......................................       623      (1,002)      1,265
  Long-term debt issued.....................................        44         693         989
  Long-term debt repaid.....................................      (433)       (481)       (104)
                                                              --------    --------    --------
Net cash used in financing activities.......................    (1,988)     (3,135)       (620)
                                                              --------    --------    --------
Change in cash and cash equivalents.........................      (512)        390         586
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of year................     3,301       2,911       2,325
                                                              --------    --------    --------
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, END OF YEAR......................  $  2,789    $  3,301    $  2,911
                                                              ========    ========    ========
Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information:
Cash paid during the year for:
  Interest..................................................  $    388    $    367    $    422
                                                              ========    ========    ========
  Income taxes..............................................  $    587    $    579    $    589
                                                              ========    ========    ========
</TABLE>

          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
<PAGE>   7

                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
           (DOLLAR AMOUNTS ARE IN MILLIONS UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED.)

1. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

  BUSINESS

     Metropolitan Life Insurance Company ("MetLife") and its subsidiaries (the
"Company") is a leading provider of insurance and financial services to a broad
section of institutional and individual customers. The Company offers life
insurance, annuities and mutual funds to individuals and group insurance and
retirement and savings products and services to corporations and other
institutions.

  PLAN OF REORGANIZATION

     On September 28, 1999, the board of directors of MetLife adopted, pursuant
to the New York Insurance Law, a plan of reorganization, and subsequently
adopted amendments to the plan, pursuant to which MetLife proposes to convert
from a mutual life insurance company to a stock life insurance company and
become a wholly-owned subsidiary of MetLife, Inc. The plan was approved by
MetLife's voting policyholders on February 7, 2000. The plan will become
effective at such time as the New York Superintendent of Insurance
("Superintendent") approves it based on finding, among other things, that the
plan is fair and equitable to policyholders. The plan requires an initial public
offering of common stock and provides for other capital raising transactions on
the effective date of the plan.

     On the date the plan of reorganization becomes effective, each
policyholder's membership interest will be extinguished and each eligible
policyholder will be entitled to receive, in exchange for that interest, trust
interests representing shares of common stock of MetLife, Inc. to be held in a
trust, cash or an adjustment to their policy values in the form of policy
credits, as provided in the plan. In addition, when MetLife demutualizes,
MetLife's Canadian branch will make cash payments to holders of certain policies
transferred to Clarica Life Insurance Company ("Clarica Life") in connection
with the sale of a substantial portion of MetLife's Canadian operations in 1998.
See Note 9.

     The plan of reorganization requires that MetLife establish and operate a
closed block for the benefit of holders of certain individual life insurance
policies of MetLife. Assets will be allocated to the closed block in an amount
that is expected to produce cash flows which, together with anticipated revenue
from the policies included in the closed block, are reasonably expected to be
sufficient to support obligations and liabilities relating to these policies,
including, but not limited to, provisions for the payment of claims and certain
expenses and taxes, and for the continuation of policyholder dividend scales in
effect for 1999, if the experience underlying such dividend scales continues,
and for appropriate adjustments in such scales if the experience changes. The
closed block assets, the cash flows generated by the closed block assets and the
anticipated revenues from the policies in the closed block will benefit only the
holders of these policies included in the closed block. To the extent that, over
time, cash flows from the assets allocated to the closed block and claims and
other experience relating to the closed block are, in the aggregate, more or
less favorable than assumed in establishing the closed block, total dividends
paid to the closed block policyholders in the future may be greater than or less
than which would have been paid to these policyholders if the policyholder
dividend scales in effect for 1999 had been continued. Any cash flows in excess
of amounts assumed will be available for distribution over time to closed block
policyholders and will not be available to stockholders. The closed block will
continue in effect until the last policy in the closed block is no longer in
force.
<PAGE>   8
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The accounting principles to account for the participating policies
included in the closed block will be those used prior to the date of the
demutualization. However, a policyholder dividend obligation will be established
for earnings that will be paid to policyholders as additional dividends in the
amounts described below, unless these earnings are offset by future unfavorable
experience in the closed block. Although all of the cash flows of the closed
block are for the benefit of closed block policyholders, the excess of closed
block liabilities over closed block assets at the effective date will represent
the estimated maximum future contributions from the closed block expected to be
reported in income as the contribution from the closed block after income taxes.
The contribution from the closed block will be recognized in income over the
period the policies and contracts in the closed block remain in force.
Management believes that over time the actual cumulative contributions from the
closed block will approximately equal the expected cumulative contributions, due
to the effect of dividend changes. If, over the period the closed block remains
in existence, the actual cumulative contribution from the closed block is
greater than the expected cumulative contribution from the closed block, the
expected cumulative contribution will be recognized in income with the excess
recorded as a policyholder dividend obligation, because the excess of the actual
cumulative contribution from the closed block over the expected cumulative
contribution will be paid to closed block policyholders as additional
policyholder dividends unless offset by future unfavorable experience of the
closed block. If over such period, the actual cumulative contribution from the
closed block is less than the expected cumulative contribution from the closed
block, the actual contribution will be recognized in income. However, dividends
in the future may be changed, which would be intended to increase future actual
contribution until the actual contribution equal the expected cumulative
contribution.

  BASIS OF PRESENTATION

     The accompanying consolidated financial statements have been prepared in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles ("GAAP"). The New York
State Insurance Department (the "Department") recognizes only statutory
accounting practices for determining and reporting the financial condition and
results of operations of an insurance company for determining solvency under the
New York Insurance Law. No consideration is given by the Department to financial
statements prepared in accordance with GAAP in making such determination.

     The preparation of financial statements requires management to make
estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and
liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the dates of
the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses
during the reporting periods. The most significant estimates include those used
in determining deferred policy acquisition costs, investment allowances and the
liability for future policyholder benefits. Actual results could differ from
those estimates.

  PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION

     The accompanying consolidated financial statements include the accounts of
MetLife and its subsidiaries, partnerships and joint ventures in which MetLife
has a majority voting interest or general partner interest with limited removal
rights by limited partners. All material intercompany accounts and transactions
have been eliminated.

     The Company accounts for its investments in real estate joint ventures and
other limited partnership interests in which it does not have a controlling
interest, but more than a minimal interest, under the equity method of
accounting.

     Minority interest related to consolidated entities included in other
liabilities was $245 and $274 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
<PAGE>   9
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Certain amounts in the prior years' consolidated financial statements have
been reclassified to conform with the 1999 presentation.

  INVESTMENTS

     The Company's fixed maturity and equity securities are classified as
available-for-sale and are reported at their estimated fair value. Unrealized
investment gains and losses on securities are recorded as a separate component
of other comprehensive income (loss), net of policyholder related amounts and
deferred income taxes. The cost of fixed maturity and equity securities is
adjusted for impairments in value deemed to be other than temporary. These
adjustments are recorded as realized losses on investments. Realized gains and
losses on sales of securities are determined on a specific identification basis.
All security transactions are recorded on a trade date basis.

     Mortgage loans on real estate are stated at amortized cost, net of
valuation allowances. Valuation allowances are established for the excess
carrying value of the mortgage loan over its estimated fair value when it is
probable that, based upon current information and events, the Company will be
unable to collect all amounts due under the contractual terms of the loan
agreement. Valuation allowances are based upon the present value of expected
future cash flows discounted at the loan's original effective interest rate or
the collateral value if the loan is collateral dependent. Interest income earned
on impaired loans is accrued on the net carrying value amount of the loan based
on the loan's effective interest rate.

     Real estate, including related improvements, is stated at cost less
accumulated depreciation. Depreciation is provided on a straight-line basis over
the estimated useful life of the asset (typically 20 to 40 years). Cost is
adjusted for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate the
carrying amount of the asset may not be recoverable. Impaired real estate is
written down to estimated fair value with the impairment loss being included in
realized losses on investments. Impairment losses are based upon the estimated
fair value of real estate, which is generally computed using the present value
of expected future cash flows from the real estate discounted at a rate
commensurate with the underlying risks. Real estate acquired in satisfaction of
debt is recorded at estimated fair value at the date of foreclosure. Valuation
allowances on real estate held-for-sale are computed using the lower of
depreciated cost or estimated fair value, net of disposition costs.

     Policy loans are stated at unpaid principal balances.

     Short-term investments are stated at amortized cost, which approximates
fair value.

  DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS

     The Company uses derivative instruments to manage market risk through one
of four principal risk management strategies: the hedging of invested assets,
liabilities, portfolios of assets or liabilities and anticipated transactions.
The Company's derivative strategy employs a variety of instruments including
financial futures, financial forwards, interest rate and foreign currency swaps,
floors, foreign exchange contracts, caps and options.

     The Company's derivative program is monitored by senior management. The
Company's risk of loss is typically limited to the fair value of its derivative
instruments and not to the notional or contractual amounts of these derivatives.
Risk arises from changes in the fair value of the underlying instruments and,
with respect to over-the-counter transactions, from the possible inability of
counterparties to meet the terms of the contracts. The Company has strict
policies regarding the financial stability and credit standing of its major
counterparties.
<PAGE>   10
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The Company's derivative instruments are designated as hedges and are
highly correlated to the underlying risk at contract inception. The Company
monitors the effectiveness of its hedges throughout the contract term using an
offset ratio of 80 to 125 percent as its minimum acceptable threshold for hedge
effectiveness. Derivative instruments that lose their effectiveness are marked
to market through net investment income.

     Gains or losses on financial futures contracts entered into in anticipation
of investment transactions are deferred and, at the time of the ultimate
investment purchase or disposition, recorded as an adjustment to the basis of
the purchased assets or to the proceeds on disposition. Gains or losses on
financial futures used in asset risk management are deferred and amortized into
net investment income over the remaining term of the investment. Gains or losses
on financial futures used in portfolio risk management are deferred and
amortized into net investment income or policyholder benefits over the remaining
life of the hedged sector of the underlying portfolio.

     Financial forward contracts that are entered into to purchase securities
are marked to fair value through other comprehensive income (loss), similar to
the accounting for the investment security. Such contracts are accounted for at
settlement by recording the purchase of the specified securities at the
contracted value. Gains or losses resulting from the termination of forward
contracts are recognized immediately as a component of net investment income.

     Interest rate and certain foreign currency swaps involve the periodic
exchange of payments without the exchange of underlying principal or notional
amounts. Net receipts or payments are accrued and recognized over the term of
the swap agreement as an adjustment to net investment income or other expense.
Gains or losses resulting from swap terminations are amortized over the
remaining term of the underlying asset or liability. Gains and losses on swaps
and certain foreign forward exchange contracts entered into in anticipation of
investment transactions are deferred and, at the time of the ultimate investment
purchase or disposition, reflected as an adjustment to the basis of the
purchased assets or to the proceeds of disposition. In the event the asset or
liability underlying a swap is disposed of, the swap position is closed
immediately and any gain or loss is recorded as an adjustment to the proceeds
from disposition.

     The Company periodically enters into collars, which consist of purchased
put and written call options, to lock in unrealized gains on equity securities.
Collars are marked to market through other comprehensive income (loss), similar
to the accounting for the underlying equity securities. Purchased interest rate
caps and floors are used to offset the risk of interest rate changes related to
insurance liabilities. Premiums paid on floors, caps and options are split into
two components, time value and intrinsic value. Time value is amortized over the
life of the applicable derivative instrument. The intrinsic value and any gains
or losses relating to these derivative instruments adjust the basis of the
underlying asset or liability and are recognized as a component of net
investment income over the term of the underlying asset or liability being
hedged as an adjustment to the yield.

  CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS

     The Company considers all highly liquid investments purchased with an
original maturity of three months or less to be cash equivalents.
<PAGE>   11
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

  PROPERTY, EQUIPMENT AND LEASEHOLD IMPROVEMENTS

     Property, equipment and leasehold improvements, which are included in other
assets, are stated at cost, less accumulated depreciation and amortization.
Depreciation is determined using either the straight-line or
sum-of-the-years-digits method over the estimated useful lives of the assets.
Estimated lives range from 20 to 40 years for real estate and 5 to 15 years for
all other property and equipment. Accumulated depreciation of property and
equipment and accumulated amortization on leasehold improvements was $1,130 and
$1,098 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. Related depreciation and
amortization expense was $103, $116 and $103 for the years ended December 31,
1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

  DEFERRED POLICY ACQUISITION COSTS

     The costs of acquiring new insurance business that vary with, and are
primarily related to, the production of new business are deferred. Such costs,
which consist principally of commissions, agency and policy issue expenses, are
amortized with interest over the expected life of the contract for participating
traditional life, universal life and investment-type products. Generally,
deferred policy acquisition costs are amortized in proportion to the present
value of estimated gross margins or profits from investment, mortality, expense
margins and surrender charges. Interest rates are based on rates in effect at
the inception of the contracts. Actual gross margins or profits can vary from
management's estimates resulting in increases or decreases in the rate of
amortization. Management periodically updates these estimates and evaluates the
recoverability of deferred policy acquisition costs. When appropriate,
management revises its assumptions of the estimated gross margins or profits of
these contracts, and the cumulative amortization is re-estimated and adjusted by
a cumulative charge or credit to current operations.

     Deferred policy acquisition costs for non-participating traditional life,
non-medical health and annuity policies with life contingencies are amortized in
proportion to anticipated premiums. Assumptions as to anticipated premiums are
made at the date of policy issuance and are consistently applied during the
lives of the contracts. Deviations from estimated experience are included in
operations when they occur. For these contracts, the amortization period is
typically the estimated life of the policy.

     Deferred policy acquisition costs related to internally replaced contracts
are expensed at date of replacement.

     Deferred policy acquisition costs for property and casualty insurance
contracts, which are primarily comprised of commissions and certain underwriting
expenses, are deferred and amortized on a pro rata basis over the applicable
contract term or reinsurance treaty.

     On September 28, 1999, the Company's Board of Directors adopted a plan of
reorganization. Consequently, in the fourth quarter of 1999, the Company was
able to commit to state insurance regulatory authorities that it would establish
investment sub-segments to further align investments with the traditional
individual life business of the Individual segment. As a result, future
dividends for the traditional individual life business will be determined based
on the results of the new investment sub-segments. Additionally, estimated
future gross margins used to determine amortization of deferred policy
acquisition costs and the amount of unrealized investment gains and losses
relating to these products are based on investments in the new sub-segments.
Using the investments in the sub-segments to determine estimated gross margins
and unrealized investment gains and losses increased 1999 amortization of
deferred policy acquisition costs by $56 (net of income taxes of $32) and
decreased other comprehensive loss in 1999 by $123 (net of income taxes of $70).
<PAGE>   12
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Information regarding deferred policy acquisition costs is as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                        ---------------------------
                                                         1999       1998      1997
                                                         ----       ----      ----
<S>                                                     <C>        <C>       <C>
Balance at January 1..................................  $ 6,538    $6,436    $7,227
Capitalized during the year...........................    1,160     1,025     1,000
                                                        -------    ------    ------
     Total............................................    7,698     7,461     8,227
                                                        -------    ------    ------
Amortization allocated to:
  Net realized investment gains (losses)..............      (46)      240        70
  Unrealized investment gains (losses)................   (1,628)     (216)      727
  Other expenses......................................      862       587       771
                                                        -------    ------    ------
     Total amortization...............................     (812)      611     1,568
                                                        -------    ------    ------
Dispositions and other................................      (18)     (312)     (223)
                                                        -------    ------    ------
Balance at December 31................................  $ 8,492    $6,538    $6,436
                                                        =======    ======    ======
</TABLE>

     Amortization of deferred policy acquisition costs is allocated to (1)
realized investment gains and losses to provide consolidated statement of income
information regarding the impact of such gains and losses on the amount of the
amortization, (2) unrealized investment gains and losses to provide information
regarding the amount of deferred policy acquisition costs that would have been
amortized if such gains and losses had been realized and (3) other expenses to
provide amounts related to the gross margins or profits originating from
transactions other than investment gains and losses.

     Realized investment gains and losses related to certain products have a
direct impact on the amortization of deferred policy acquisition costs.
Presenting realized investment gains and losses net of related amortization of
deferred policy acquisition costs provides information useful in evaluating the
operating performance of the Company. This presentation may not be comparable to
presentations made by other insurers.

  INTANGIBLE ASSETS

     The excess of cost over the fair value of net assets acquired ("goodwill")
and other intangible assets, including the value of business acquired, are
included in other assets. Goodwill is amortized on a straight-line basis over a
period ranging from 10 to 30 years. The Company continually reviews goodwill to
assess recoverability from future operations using undiscounted cash flows.
Impairments are recognized in operating results if a permanent diminution in
value is deemed to have occurred. Other intangible assets are amortized over the
expected policy or contract duration in relation to the present value of
estimated gross profits from such policies and contracts.
<PAGE>   13
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              GOODWILL           OTHER INTANGIBLE ASSETS
                                        --------------------    --------------------------
                                        1999    1998    1997     1999      1998      1997
                                        ----    ----    ----     ----      ----      ----
<S>                                     <C>     <C>     <C>     <C>       <C>       <C>
YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31
Net Balance at January 1..............  $404    $359    $136    $1,006    $1,055    $  767
Acquisitions..........................   237      67     240       156        39       355
Amortization..........................   (30)    (22)    (17)     (114)      (88)      (67)
                                        ----    ----    ----    ------    ------    ------
Net Balance at December 31............  $611    $404    $359    $1,048    $1,006    $1,055
                                        ====    ====    ====    ======    ======    ======
DECEMBER 31
Accumulated amortization..............  $118    $ 88            $  392    $  278
                                        ====    ====            ======    ======
</TABLE>

  FUTURE POLICY BENEFITS AND POLICYHOLDER ACCOUNT BALANCES

     Future policy benefit liabilities for participating traditional life
insurance policies are equal to the aggregate of (a) net level premium reserves
for death and endowment policy benefits (calculated based upon the nonforfeiture
interest rate, ranging from 3% to 10%, and mortality rates guaranteed in
calculating the cash surrender values described in such contracts), (b) the
liability for terminal dividends and (c) premium deficiency reserves, which are
established when the liabilities for future policy benefits plus the present
value of expected future gross premiums are insufficient to provide for expected
future policy benefits and expenses after deferred policy acquisition costs are
written off.

     Future policy benefit liabilities for traditional annuities are equal to
accumulated contractholder fund balances during the accumulation period and the
present value of expected future payments after annuitization. Interest rates
used in establishing such liabilities range from 3% to 8%. Future policy benefit
liabilities for non-medical health insurance are calculated using the net level
premium method and assumptions as to future morbidity, withdrawals and interest,
which provide a margin for adverse deviation. Interest rates used in
establishing such liabilities range from 3% to 10%. Future policy benefit
liabilities for disabled lives are estimated using the present value of benefits
method and experience assumptions as to claim terminations, expenses and
interest. Interest rates used in establishing such liabilities range from 3% to
10%.

     Policyholder account balances for universal life and investment-type
contracts are equal to the policy account values, which consist of an
accumulation of gross premium payments plus credited interest, ranging from 2%
to 17%, less expenses, mortality charges and withdrawals.

     The liability for unpaid claims and claim expenses for property and
casualty insurance represents the amount estimated for claims that have been
reported but not settled and claims incurred but not reported. Liabilities for
unpaid claims are estimated based upon the Company's historical experience and
other actuarial assumptions that consider the effects of current developments,
anticipated trends and risk management programs. Revisions of these estimates
are included in operations in the year such refinements are made.

  RECOGNITION OF INSURANCE REVENUE AND RELATED BENEFITS

     Premiums related to traditional life and annuity policies with life
contingencies are recognized as revenues when due. Benefits and expenses are
provided against such revenues to recognize profits over the estimated lives of
the policies. When premiums are due over a significantly shorter period than the
period over which benefits are provided, any excess profit is deferred and
recognized into operations in a constant relationship to insurance in-force or,
for annuities, the amount of expected future policy benefit payments.
<PAGE>   14
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Premiums related to non-medical health contracts are recognized on a pro
rata basis over the applicable contract term.

     Premiums related to universal life and investment-type products are
credited to policyholder account balances. Revenues from such contracts consist
of amounts assessed against policyholder account balances for mortality, policy
administration and surrender charges. Amounts that are charged to operations
include interest credited and benefit claims incurred in excess of related
policyholder account balances.

     Premiums related to property and casualty contracts are recognized as
revenue on a pro rata basis over the applicable contract term. Unearned premiums
are included in other liabilities.

  DIVIDENDS TO POLICYHOLDERS

     Dividends to policyholders are determined annually by the board of
directors. The aggregate amount of policyholders' dividends is related to actual
interest, mortality, morbidity and expense experience for the year, as well as
management's judgment as to the appropriate level of statutory surplus to be
retained by MetLife and its insurance subsidiaries.

  DIVIDEND RESTRICTIONS

     MetLife, when it converts from a mutual life insurance company to a stock
life insurance company, may be restricted as to the amounts it may pay as
dividends to MetLife, Inc. Under the New York Insurance Law, the Superintendent
has broad discretion to determine whether the financial condition of a stock
life insurance company would support the payment of dividends to its
shareholders. The Department has established informal guidelines for the
Superintendent's determinations which focus upon, among other things, the
overall financial condition and profitability of the insurer under statutory
accounting practices.

  PARTICIPATING BUSINESS

     Participating business represented approximately 19% and 21% of the
Company's life insurance in-force, and 84% and 81% of the number of life
insurance policies in-force, at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
Participating policies represented approximately 42% and 44%, 39% and 40%, and
41% and 41% of gross and net life insurance premiums for the years ended
December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

  INCOME TAXES

     MetLife and its includable life insurance and non-life insurance
subsidiaries file a consolidated U.S. federal income tax return in accordance
with the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended (the "Code"). Under
the Code, the amount of federal income tax expense incurred by mutual life
insurance companies includes an equity tax calculated based upon a prescribed
formula that incorporates a differential earnings rate between stock and mutual
life insurance companies. MetLife will not be subject to the equity tax when it
converts to a stock life insurance company. The future tax consequences of
temporary differences between financial reporting and tax bases of assets and
liabilities are measured at the balance sheet dates and are recorded as deferred
income tax assets and liabilities.

  REINSURANCE

     The Company has reinsured certain of its life insurance and property and
casualty insurance contracts with other insurance companies under various
agreements. Amounts due from
<PAGE>   15
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

reinsurers are estimated based upon assumptions consistent with those used in
establishing the liabilities related to the underlying reinsured contracts.
Policy and contract liabilities are reported gross of reinsurance credits.
Deferred policy acquisition costs are reduced by amounts recovered under
reinsurance contracts. Amounts received from reinsurers for policy
administration are reported in other revenues.

  SEPARATE ACCOUNTS

     Separate accounts are established in conformity with insurance laws and are
generally not chargeable with liabilities that arise from any other business of
the Company. Separate account assets are subject to general account claims only
to the extent the value of such assets exceeds the separate account liabilities.
Investments (stated at estimated fair value) and liabilities of the separate
accounts are reported separately as assets and liabilities. Deposits to separate
accounts, investment income and realized and unrealized gains and losses on the
investments of the separate accounts accrue directly to contractholders and,
accordingly, are not reflected in the Company's consolidated statements of
income and cash flows. Mortality, policy administration and surrender charges to
all separate accounts are included in revenues. See Note 6.

  FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION

     Balance sheet accounts of foreign operations are translated at the exchange
rates in effect at each year-end and income and expense accounts are translated
at the average rates of exchange prevailing during the year. The local
currencies of foreign operations are the functional currencies unless the local
economy is highly inflationary. Translation adjustments are charged or credited
directly to other comprehensive income (loss). Gains and losses from foreign
currency transactions are reported in other expenses and were insignificant for
all years presented.

  EXTRAORDINARY ITEM -- DEMUTUALIZATION EXPENSE

     The accompanying consolidated statements of income include extraordinary
charges of $225 (net of income taxes of $35) and $4 (net of income taxes of $2)
for the years ended December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively, related to costs
associated with the demutualization.

  APPLICATION OF ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

     Effective January 1, 1999, the Company adopted Statement of Position
("SOP") 98-5, Reporting on the Costs of Start-Up Activities ("SOP 98-5"). SOP
98-5 broadly defines start-up activities. SOP 98-5 requires costs of start-up
activities and organization costs to be expensed as incurred. Adoption of SOP
98-5 did not have a material effect on the Company's consolidated financial
statements.

     Effective January 1, 1999, the Company adopted SOP 98-1, Accounting for the
Costs of Computer Software Developed or Obtained for Internal Use ("SOP 98-1").
SOP 98-1 provides guidance for determining when an entity should capitalize or
expense external and internal costs of computer software developed or obtained
for internal use. Adoption of the provisions of SOP 98-1 had the effect of
increasing other assets by $82 at December 31, 1999.

     Effective January 1, 1999, the Company adopted SOP 97-3, Accounting for
Insurance and Other Enterprises for Insurance Related Assessments ("SOP 97-3").
SOP 97-3 provides guidance on accounting by insurance and other enterprises for
assessments related to insurance activities including recognition, measurement
and disclosure of guaranty fund and other insurance related
<PAGE>   16
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

assessments. Adoption of SOP 97-3 did not have a material effect on the
Company's consolidated financial statements.

     In 1998, the Company adopted the provisions of Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 125, Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of
Financial Assets and Extinguishments of Liabilities ("SFAS 125") which were
deferred by SFAS 127, Deferral of the Effective Date of Certain Provisions of
FASB Statement No. 125. The deferred provisions provide accounting and reporting
standards related to repurchase agreements, dollar rolls, securities lending and
similar transactions. Adoption of the provisions had the effect of increasing
assets and liabilities by $3,769 at December 31, 1998 and increasing other
revenues and other expenses by $266 for the year ended December 31, 1998.

     During 1997, the Company changed to the retrospective interest method of
accounting for investment income on structured notes in accordance with Emerging
Issues Task Force Consensus No. 96-12, Recognition of Interest Income and
Balance Sheet Classification of Structured Notes. This accounting change
increased 1997 net investment income by $175, which included an immaterial
amount related to prior years.

     In June 1999, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards No. 137, Accounting for Derivative Instruments
and Hedging Activities -- Deferral of the Effective Date of FASB Statement No.
133 ("SFAS 137"). SFAS 137 defers the provisions of Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 133, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging
Activities ("SFAS 133") until January 1, 2001. SFAS 133 requires, among other
things, that all derivatives be recognized in the consolidated balance sheets as
either assets or liabilities and measured at fair value. The corresponding
derivative gains and losses should be reported based upon the hedge
relationship, if such a relationship exists. Changes in the fair value of
derivatives that are not designated as hedges or that do not meet the hedge
accounting criteria in SFAS 133 are required to be reported in income. The
Company is in the process of quantifying the impact of SFAS 133 on its
consolidated financial statements.

     In October 1998, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
("AICPA") issued Statement of Position ("SOP") 98-7, Accounting for Insurance
and Reinsurance Contracts That Do Not Transfer Insurance Risk ("SOP 98-7"). SOP
98-7 provides guidance on the method of accounting for insurance and reinsurance
contracts that do not transfer insurance risk, defined in the SOP as the deposit
method. SOP 98-7 classifies insurance and reinsurance contracts for which the
deposit method is appropriate into those that 1) transfer only significant
timing risk, 2) transfer only significant underwriting risk, 3) transfer neither
significant timing or underwriting risk and 4) have an indeterminate risk. The
Company is required to adopt SOP 98-7 as of January 1, 2000. Adoption of SOP
98-7 is not expected to have a material effect on the Company's consolidated
financial statements.
<PAGE>   17
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

2. INVESTMENTS

     The components of net investment income were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Fixed maturities....................................  $ 6,766    $ 6,563    $ 6,445
Equity securities...................................       40         78         50
Mortgage loans on real estate.......................    1,479      1,572      1,684
Real estate and real estate joint ventures..........    1,426      1,529      1,718
Policy loans........................................      340        387        368
Other limited partnership interests.................      199        196        302
Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments...      173        187        169
Other...............................................      501        841        368
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                       10,924     11,353     11,104
Less: Investment expenses...........................    1,108      1,125      1,613
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                      $ 9,816    $10,228    $ 9,491
                                                      =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

     Net realized investment gains (losses), including changes in valuation
allowances, were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                          -------------------------
                                                          1999      1998      1997
                                                          ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                       <C>      <C>       <C>
Fixed maturities........................................  $(538)   $  573    $  118
Equity securities.......................................     99       994       224
Mortgage loans on real estate...........................     28        23        56
Real estate and real estate joint ventures..............    265       424       446
Other limited partnership interests.....................     33        13        12
Sales of businesses.....................................     --       531       139
Other...................................................    (24)       71        23
                                                          -----    ------    ------
                                                           (137)    2,629     1,018
Amounts allocable to:
  Future policy benefit loss recognition................     --      (272)     (126)
  Deferred policy acquisition costs.....................     46      (240)      (70)
  Participating contracts...............................     21       (96)      (35)
                                                          -----    ------    ------
                                                          $ (70)   $2,021    $  787
                                                          =====    ======    ======
</TABLE>

     Realized investment gains (losses) have been reduced by (1) additions to
future policy benefits resulting from the need to establish additional
liabilities due to the recognition of investment gains, (2) deferred policy
acquisition cost amortization to the extent that such amortization results from
realized investment gains and losses, and (3) additions to participating
contractholder accounts when amounts equal to such investment gains and losses
are credited to the contractholders' accounts. This presentation may not be
comparable to presentations made by other insurers.
<PAGE>   18
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The components of net unrealized investment gains (losses), included in
accumulated other comprehensive income (loss), were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Fixed maturities....................................  $(1,828)   $ 4,809    $ 4,766
Equity securities...................................      875        832      1,605
Other invested assets...............................      165        154        294
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                         (788)     5,795      6,665
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Amounts allocable to:
  Future policy benefit loss recognition............     (249)    (2,248)    (2,189)
  Deferred policy acquisition costs.................      697       (931)    (1,147)
  Participating contracts...........................     (118)      (212)      (312)
Deferred income taxes...............................      161       (864)    (1,119)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                          491     (4,255)    (4,767)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                      $  (297)   $ 1,540    $ 1,898
                                                      =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

     The changes in net unrealized investment gains (losses) were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                        ---------------------------
                                                         1999       1998      1997
                                                         ----       ----      ----
<S>                                                     <C>        <C>       <C>
Balance at January 1..................................  $ 1,540    $1,898    $1,028
Unrealized investment gains (losses) during the
  year................................................   (6,583)     (870)    3,402
Unrealized investment (gains) losses relating to:
  Future policy benefit loss recognition..............    1,999       (59)     (970)
  Deferred policy acquisition costs...................    1,628       216      (727)
  Participating contracts.............................       94       100      (303)
Deferred income taxes.................................    1,025       255      (532)
                                                        -------    ------    ------
Balance at December 31................................  $  (297)   $1,540    $1,898
                                                        =======    ======    ======
Net change in unrealized investment gains (losses)....  $(1,837)   $ (358)   $  870
                                                        =======    ======    ======
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   19
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

  FIXED MATURITIES AND EQUITY SECURITIES

     Fixed maturities and equity securities at December 31, 1999 were as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             COST OR     GROSS UNREALIZED
                                            AMORTIZED    ----------------    ESTIMATED
                                              COST        GAIN      LOSS     FAIR VALUE
                                            ---------     ----      ----     ----------
<S>                                         <C>          <C>       <C>       <C>
Fixed Maturities:
  Bonds:
     U.S. Treasury securities and
       obligations of U.S. government
       corporations and agencies..........   $ 5,990     $  456    $  147     $ 6,299
     States and political subdivisions....     1,583          4        45       1,542
     Foreign governments..................     4,090        210        94       4,206
     Corporate............................    47,505        585     1,913      46,177
     Mortgage and asset-backed
       securities.........................    27,396        112       847      26,661
     Other................................    12,235        313       462      12,086
                                             -------     ------    ------     -------
                                              98,799      1,680     3,508      96,971
  Redeemable preferred stocks.............        10         --        --          10
                                             -------     ------    ------     -------
                                             $98,809     $1,680    $3,508     $96,981
                                             =======     ======    ======     =======
Equity Securities:
  Common stocks...........................   $   980     $  921    $   35     $ 1,866
  Nonredeemable preferred stocks..........       151         --        11         140
                                             -------     ------    ------     -------
                                             $ 1,131     $  921    $   46     $ 2,006
                                             =======     ======    ======     =======
</TABLE>

     Fixed maturities and equity securities at December 31, 1998 were as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             COST OR     GROSS UNREALIZED
                                            AMORTIZED    -----------------    ESTIMATED
                                              COST        GAIN       LOSS     FAIR VALUE
                                            ---------     ----       ----     ----------
<S>                                         <C>          <C>         <C>      <C>
Fixed Maturities:
  Bonds:
     U.S. Treasury securities and
       obligations of U.S. government
       corporations and agencies..........   $ 6,640     $1,117      $ 10      $  7,747
     States and political subdivisions....       597         26        --           623
     Foreign governments..................     3,435        254        88         3,601
     Corporate............................    46,377      2,471       260        48,588
     Mortgage and asset-backed
       securities.........................    26,456        569        46        26,979
     Other................................    12,438      1,069       293        13,214
                                             -------     ------      ----      --------
                                              95,943      5,506       697       100,752
  Redeemable preferred stocks.............        15         --        --            15
                                             -------     ------      ----      --------
                                             $95,958     $5,506      $697      $100,767
                                             =======     ======      ====      ========
Equity Securities:
  Common stocks...........................   $ 1,286     $  923      $ 77      $  2,132
  Nonredeemable preferred stocks..........       222          4        18           208
                                             -------     ------      ----      --------
                                             $ 1,508     $  927      $ 95      $  2,340
                                             =======     ======      ====      ========
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   20
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The Company held foreign currency derivatives with notional amounts of
$4,002 and $716 to hedge the exchange rate risk associated with foreign bonds at
December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. The Company also held options with
fair values of $(11) to hedge the market value of common stocks at December 31,
1998.

     At December 31, 1999, fixed maturities held by the Company that were below
investment grade or not rated by an independent rating agency had an estimated
fair value of $8,813. At December 31, 1999, non-income producing fixed
maturities were insignificant.

     The amortized cost and estimated fair value of bonds at December 31, 1999,
by contractual maturity date, are shown below:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        AMORTIZED    ESTIMATED
                                                          COST       FAIR VALUE
                                                        ---------    ----------
<S>                                                     <C>          <C>
Due in one year or less...............................   $ 3,180      $ 3,217
Due after one year through five years.................    18,152       18,061
Due after five years through ten years................    23,755       23,114
Due after ten years...................................    26,316       25,918
                                                         -------      -------
                                                          71,403       70,310
Mortgage and asset-backed securities..................    27,396       26,661
                                                         -------      -------
                                                         $98,799      $96,971
                                                         =======      =======
</TABLE>

     Fixed maturities not due at a single maturity date have been included in
the above table in the year of final maturity. Actual maturities may differ from
contractual maturities due to the exercise of prepayment options.

     Sales of securities were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Securities classified as available-for-sale:
  Proceeds..........................................  $59,852    $46,913    $69,275
  Gross realized gains..............................  $   605    $ 2,053    $   965
  Gross realized losses.............................  $   911    $   486    $   627
Fixed maturities classified as held-to-maturity:
  Proceeds..........................................  $    --    $    --    $   352
  Gross realized gains..............................  $    --    $    --    $     5
  Gross realized losses.............................  $    --    $    --    $     1
</TABLE>

     Gross realized losses above exclude writedowns recorded during 1999 for
permanently impaired available-for-sale securities of $133.

     During 1997, fixed maturities with an amortized cost of $11,682 were
transferred from held-to-maturity to available-for-sale. Other comprehensive
income at the date of reclassification was increased by $198 excluding the
effects of deferred income taxes and policyholder related amounts.

     Excluding investments in U.S. governments and agencies, the Company is not
exposed to any significant concentration of credit risk in its fixed maturities
portfolio.
<PAGE>   21
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

  SECURITIES LENDING PROGRAM

     The Company participates in securities lending programs whereby large
blocks of securities, which are returnable to the Company on short notice and
included in investments, are loaned to third parties, primarily major brokerage
firms. The Company requires a minimum of 102% of the fair value of the loaned
securities to be separately maintained as collateral for the loans. Securities
with a cost or amortized cost of $6,458 and $4,005 and estimated fair value of
$6,391 and $4,552 were on loan under the program at December 31, 1999 and 1998,
respectively. The Company was liable for cash collateral under its control of
$6,461 and $3,769 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. This liability is
included in other liabilities. Security collateral on deposit from securities
borrowers is returnable to them on short notice and is not reflected in the
consolidated financial statements.

  STATUTORY DEPOSITS

     The Company had investment assets on deposit with regulatory agencies of
$476 and $466 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.

  MORTGAGE LOANS ON REAL ESTATE

     Mortgage loans were categorized as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           DECEMBER 31,
                                             ----------------------------------------
                                                    1999                  1998
                                             ------------------    ------------------
                                             AMOUNT     PERCENT    AMOUNT     PERCENT
                                             ------     -------    ------     -------
<S>                                          <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
Commercial mortgage loans..................  $14,931       75%     $12,503       74%
Agricultural mortgage loans................    4,816       24%       4,256       25%
Residential mortgage loans.................       82        1%         241        1%
                                             -------      ---      -------      ---
                                              19,829      100%      17,000      100%
                                                          ===                   ===
Less: Valuation allowances.................       90                   173
                                             -------               -------
                                             $19,739               $16,827
                                             =======               =======
</TABLE>

     Mortgage loans on real estate are collateralized by properties primarily
located throughout the United States. At December 31, 1999, approximately 16%,
8% and 8% of the properties were located in California, New York and Florida,
respectively. Generally, the Company (as the lender) requires that a minimum of
one-fourth of the purchase price of the underlying real estate be paid by the
borrower.

     Certain of the Company's real estate joint ventures have mortgage loans
with the Company. The carrying values of such mortgages were $547 and $606 at
December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
<PAGE>   22
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Changes in mortgage loan valuation allowances were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                       ---------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                    <C>        <C>        <C>
Balance at January 1.................................  $ 173      $ 289      $ 469
Additions............................................     40         40         61
Deductions for writedowns and dispositions...........   (123)      (130)      (241)
Deductions for disposition of affiliates.............     --        (26)        --
                                                       -----      -----      -----
Balance at December 31...............................  $  90      $ 173      $ 289
                                                       =====      =====      =====
</TABLE>

     A portion of the Company's mortgage loans on real estate was impaired and
consisted of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              DECEMBER 31,
                                                             --------------
                                                             1999     1998
                                                             ----     ----
<S>                                                          <C>     <C>
Impaired mortgage loans with valuation allowances..........  $540    $  823
Impaired mortgage loans without valuation allowances.......   437       375
                                                             ----    ------
                                                              977     1,198
Less: Valuation allowances.................................    83       149
                                                             ----    ------
                                                             $894    $1,049
                                                             ====    ======
</TABLE>

     The average investment in impaired mortgage loans on real estate was
$1,134, $1,282 and $1,680 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997,
respectively. Interest income on impaired mortgages was $101, $109 and $110 for
the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

     The investment in restructured mortgage loans on real estate was $980 and
$1,140 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. Interest income of $80, $74
and $91 was recognized on restructured loans for the years ended December 31,
1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively. Gross interest income that would have been
recorded in accordance with the original terms of such loans amounted to $92,
$87 and $116 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

     Mortgage loans on real estate with scheduled payments of 60 days (90 days
for agriculture mortgages) or more past due or in foreclosure had an amortized
cost of $44 and $65 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
<PAGE>   23
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

  REAL ESTATE AND REAL ESTATE JOINT VENTURES

     Real estate and real estate joint ventures consisted of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                DECEMBER 31,
                                                              ----------------
                                                               1999      1998
                                                               ----      ----
<S>                                                           <C>       <C>
Real estate and real estate joint ventures
  held-for-investment.......................................  $5,440    $6,301
Impairments.................................................    (289)     (408)
                                                              ------    ------
                                                               5,151     5,893
                                                              ------    ------
Real estate and real estate joint ventures held-for-sale....     719       546
Impairments.................................................    (187)     (119)
Valuation allowance.........................................     (34)      (33)
                                                              ------    ------
                                                                 498       394
                                                              ------    ------
                                                              $5,649    $6,287
                                                              ======    ======
</TABLE>

     Accumulated depreciation on real estate was $2,235 and $2,065 at December
31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. Related depreciation expense was $247, $282 and
$338 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

     Real estate and real estate joint ventures were categorized as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             DECEMBER 31,
                                                --------------------------------------
                                                      1999                 1998
                                                -----------------    -----------------
                                                AMOUNT    PERCENT    AMOUNT    PERCENT
                                                ------    -------    ------    -------
<S>                                             <C>       <C>        <C>       <C>
Office........................................  $3,846       68%     $4,265       68%
Retail........................................     587       10%        640       10%
Apartments....................................     474        8%        418        7%
Land..........................................     258        5%        313        5%
Agriculture...................................      96        2%        195        3%
Other.........................................     388        7%        456        7%
                                                ------      ---      ------      ---
                                                $5,649      100%     $6,287      100%
                                                ======      ===      ======      ===
</TABLE>

     The Company's real estate holdings are primarily located throughout the
United States. At December 31, 1999, approximately 25%, 24% and 10% of the
Company's real estate holdings were located in New York, California and Texas,
respectively.

     Changes in real estate and real estate joint ventures held-for-sale
valuation allowance were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                             ------------------------
                                                             1999     1998      1997
                                                             ----     ----      ----
<S>                                                          <C>      <C>      <C>
Balance at January 1.......................................  $ 33     $110     $ 661
Additions charged (credited) to operations.................    36       (5)      (76)
Deductions for writedowns and dispositions.................   (35)     (72)     (475)
                                                             ----     ----     -----
Balance at December 31.....................................  $ 34     $ 33     $ 110
                                                             ====     ====     =====
</TABLE>

     Investment income related to impaired real estate and real estate joint
ventures held-for-investment was $61, $105 and $28 for the years ended December
31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively. Investment income related to real estate
and real estate joint ventures held-for-sale
<PAGE>   24
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

was $14, $3 and $11 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997,
respectively. The carrying value of non-income producing real estate and real
estate joint ventures was $22 and $1 at December 31, 1999 and 1998,
respectively.

     The Company owned real estate acquired in satisfaction of debt of $47 and
$154 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.

     Real estate of $37, $69 and $151 was acquired in satisfaction of debt
during the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

  LEVERAGED LEASES

     Leveraged leases, included in other invested assets, consisted of the
following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             DECEMBER 31,
                                                           ----------------
                                                            1999      1998
                                                            ----      ----
<S>                                                        <C>       <C>
Investment...............................................  $1,016    $1,067
Estimated residual values................................     559       607
                                                           ------    ------
                                                            1,575     1,674
Unearned income..........................................    (417)     (471)
                                                           ------    ------
                                                           $1,158    $1,203
                                                           ======    ======
</TABLE>

     The investment amounts set forth above are generally due in monthly
installments. The payment periods generally range from four to 15 years, but in
certain circumstances are as long as 30 years. Average yields range from 7% to
12%. These receivables are generally collateralized by the related property.

3. DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS

     The table below provides a summary of the carrying value, notional amount
and current market or fair value of derivative financial instruments (other than
equity options) held at December 31, 1999 and 1998:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        1999                                         1998
                                     ------------------------------------------   ------------------------------------------
                                                              CURRENT MARKET                               CURRENT MARKET
                                                              OR FAIR VALUE                                OR FAIR VALUE
                                     CARRYING   NOTIONAL   --------------------   CARRYING   NOTIONAL   --------------------
                                      VALUE      AMOUNT    ASSETS   LIABILITIES    VALUE      AMOUNT    ASSETS   LIABILITIES
                                     --------   --------   ------   -----------   --------   --------   ------   -----------
<S>                                  <C>        <C>        <C>      <C>           <C>        <C>        <C>      <C>
Financial futures..................    $ 27     $ 3,140     $37        $ 10         $ 3      $ 2,190     $ 8        $  6
Foreign exchange contracts.........      --          --      --          --          --          136      --           2
Interest rate swaps................     (32)      1,316      11          40          (9)       1,621      17          50
Foreign currency swaps.............      --       4,002      26         103          (1)         580       3          62
Caps...............................       1      12,376       3          --          --        8,391      --          --
                                       ----     -------     ---        ----         ---      -------     ---        ----
Total contractual commitments......    $ (4)    $20,834     $77        $153         $(7)     $12,918     $28        $120
                                       ====     =======     ===        ====         ===      =======     ===        ====
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   25
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The following is a reconciliation of the notional amounts by derivative
type and strategy at December 31, 1999 and 1998:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      DECEMBER 31, 1998               TERMINATIONS/   DECEMBER 31, 1999
                                       NOTIONAL AMOUNT    ADDITIONS    MATURITIES      NOTIONAL AMOUNT
                                      -----------------   ---------   -------------   -----------------
<S>                                   <C>                 <C>         <C>             <C>
BY DERIVATIVE TYPE
Financial futures...................       $ 2,190         $18,259       $17,309           $ 3,140
Foreign exchange contracts..........           136             702           838                --
Interest rate swaps.................         1,621             429           734             1,316
Foreign currency swaps..............           580           3,501            79             4,002
Caps................................         8,391           5,860         1,875            12,376
                                           -------         -------       -------           -------
Total contractual commitments.......       $12,918         $28,751       $20,835           $20,834
                                           =======         =======       =======           =======
BY STRATEGY
Liability hedging...................       $ 8,741         $ 5,865       $ 2,035           $12,571
Invested asset hedging..............           864           4,288           937             4,215
Portfolio hedging...................         2,830          13,920        14,729             2,021
Anticipated transaction hedging.....           483           4,678         3,134             2,027
                                           -------         -------       -------           -------
Total contractual commitments.......       $12,918         $28,751       $20,835           $20,834
                                           =======         =======       =======           =======
</TABLE>

     The following table presents the notional amounts of derivative financial
instruments by maturity at December 31, 1999:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      REMAINING LIFE
                            -------------------------------------------------------------------
                            ONE YEAR     AFTER ONE YEAR     AFTER FIVE YEARS
                            OR LESS    THROUGH FIVE YEARS   THROUGH TEN YEARS   AFTER TEN YEARS    TOTAL
                            --------   ------------------   -----------------   ---------------    -----
<S>                         <C>        <C>                  <C>                 <C>               <C>
Financial futures.........   $3,140         $    --               $ --               $ --         $ 3,140
Interest rate swaps.......      833             483                 --                 --           1,316
Foreign currency swaps....        7           3,371                503                121           4,002
Caps......................    3,426           8,930                 20                 --          12,376
                             ------         -------               ----               ----         -------
Total contractual
  commitments.............   $7,406         $12,784               $523               $121         $20,834
                             ======         =======               ====               ====         =======
</TABLE>

     In addition to the derivative instruments above, the Company uses equity
option contracts as invested asset hedges. There were ninety-two thousand equity
option contracts outstanding with a carrying value of $(11) and a market value
of $(11) at December 31, 1998.

4. FAIR VALUE INFORMATION

     The estimated fair values of financial instruments have been determined by
using available market information and the valuation methodologies described
below. Considerable judgment is often required in interpreting market data to
develop estimates of fair value. Accordingly, the estimates presented herein may
not necessarily be indicative of amounts that could be realized in a current
market exchange. The use of different assumptions or valuation methodologies may
have a material effect on the estimated fair value amounts.
<PAGE>   26
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Amounts related to the Company's financial instruments were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      NOTIONAL    CARRYING    ESTIMATED
DECEMBER 31, 1999                                      AMOUNT      VALUE      FAIR VALUE
- -----------------                                     --------    --------    ----------
<S>                                                   <C>         <C>         <C>
Assets:
  Fixed maturities..................................              $96,981      $96,981
  Equity securities.................................                2,006        2,006
  Mortgage loans on real estate.....................               19,739       19,452
  Policy loans......................................                5,598        5,618
  Short-term investments............................                3,055        3,055
  Cash and cash equivalents.........................                2,789        2,789
  Mortgage loan commitments.........................    $465           --           (7)
Liabilities:
  Policyholder account balances.....................               37,170       36,893
  Short-term debt...................................                4,208        4,208
  Long-term debt....................................                2,514        2,466
  Investment collateral.............................                6,451        6,451
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     NOTIONAL    CARRYING    ESTIMATED
DECEMBER 31, 1998                                     AMOUNT      VALUE      FAIR VALUE
- -----------------                                    --------    --------    ----------
<S>                                                  <C>         <C>         <C>
Assets:
  Fixed maturities.................................              $100,767     $100,767
  Equity securities................................                 2,340        2,340
  Mortgage loans on real estate....................                16,827       17,793
  Policy loans.....................................                 5,600        6,143
  Short-term investments...........................                 1,369        1,369
  Cash and cash equivalents........................                 3,301        3,301
  Mortgage loan commitments........................    $472            --           14
Liabilities:
  Policyholder account balances....................                37,448       37,664
  Short-term debt..................................                 3,585        3,585
  Long-term debt...................................                 2,903        3,006
  Investment collateral............................                 3,769        3,769
</TABLE>

     The methods and assumptions used to estimate the fair values of financial
instruments are summarized as follows:

  FIXED MATURITIES AND EQUITY SECURITIES

     The fair value of fixed maturities and equity securities are based upon
quotations published by applicable stock exchanges or received from other
reliable sources. For securities in which the market values were not readily
available, fair values were estimated using quoted market prices of comparable
investments.

  MORTGAGE LOANS ON REAL ESTATE AND MORTGAGE LOAN COMMITMENTS

     Fair values for mortgage loans on real estate are estimated by discounting
expected future cash flows, using current interest rates for similar loans with
similar credit risk. For mortgage loan commitments, the estimated fair value is
the net premium or discount of the commitments.
<PAGE>   27
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

  POLICY LOANS

     Fair values for policy loans are estimated by discounting expected future
cash flows using U.S. treasury rates to approximate interest rates and the
Company's past experiences to project patterns of loan accrual and repayment
characteristics.

  CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS AND SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS

     The carrying values for cash and cash equivalents and short-term
investments approximated fair market values due to the short-term maturities of
these instruments.

  POLICYHOLDER ACCOUNT BALANCES

     The fair value of policyholder account balances are estimated by
discounting expected future cash flows, based on interest rates currently being
offered for similar contracts with maturities consistent with those remaining
for the agreements being valued.

  SHORT-TERM AND LONG-TERM DEBT AND INVESTMENT COLLATERAL

     The fair values of short-term and long-term debt and investment collateral
are determined by discounting expected future cash flows, using risk rates
currently available for debt with similar terms and remaining maturities.

  DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS

     The fair value of derivative instruments, including financial futures,
financial forwards, interest rate and foreign currency swaps, floors, foreign
exchange contracts, caps and options are based upon quotations obtained from
dealers or other reliable sources. See Note 3 for derivative fair value
disclosures.

5. EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS

  PENSION BENEFIT AND OTHER BENEFIT PLANS

     The Company is both the sponsor and administrator of defined benefit
pension plans covering all eligible employees and sales representatives of
MetLife and certain of its subsidiaries. Retirement benefits are based upon
years of credited service and final average earnings history.

     The Company also provides certain postemployment benefits and certain
postretirement health care and life insurance benefits for retired employees
through insurance contracts. Substantially all of the Company's employees may,
in accordance with the plans applicable to the
<PAGE>   28
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

postretirement benefits, become eligible for these benefits if they attain
retirement age, with sufficient service, while working for the Company.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   DECEMBER 31,
                                                       ------------------------------------
                                                       PENSION BENEFITS     OTHER BENEFITS
                                                       ----------------    ----------------
                                                        1999      1998      1999      1998
                                                        ----      ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                    <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
Change in projected benefit obligation:
Projected benefit obligation at beginning of year....  $3,920    $3,573    $1,708    $1,763
  Service cost.......................................     100        90        28        31
  Interest cost......................................     271       257       107       114
  Actuarial (gains) losses...........................    (260)      212      (281)      (74)
  Divestitures, curtailments and terminations........     (22)       24        10       (13)
  Change in benefits.................................      --        12        --        --
Benefits paid........................................    (272)     (248)      (89)     (113)
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Projected benefit obligation at end of year..........   3,737     3,920     1,483     1,708
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Change in plan assets:
Contract value of plan assets at beginning of year...   4,403     4,056     1,123     1,004
  Actuarial return on plan assets....................     575       680       141       171
  Employer contribution..............................      20        15        24        61
  Benefits paid......................................    (272)     (248)      (89)     (113)
  Other payments.....................................      --      (100)       --        --
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Contract value of plan assets at end of year.........   4,726     4,403     1,199     1,123
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Over (under) funded..................................     989       483      (284)     (585)
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Unrecognized net asset at transition.................     (66)      (98)       --        --
Unrecognized net actuarial gains.....................    (564)      (78)     (487)     (322)
Unrecognized prior service cost......................     127       145        (2)       (2)
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Prepaid (accrued) benefit cost.......................  $  486    $  452    $ (773)   $ (909)
                                                       ======    ======    ======    ======
Qualified plan prepaid pension cost..................  $  632    $  568    $   --    $   --
Non-qualified plan accrued pension cost..............    (146)     (116)       --        --
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Prepaid benefit cost.................................  $  486    $  452    $   --    $   --
                                                       ======    ======    ======    ======
</TABLE>

     The aggregate projected benefit obligation and aggregate contract value of
plan assets for the pension plans were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        NON-QUALIFIED
                                     QUALIFIED PLAN          PLAN              TOTAL
                                    ----------------    --------------    ----------------
                                     1999      1998     1999     1998      1999      1998
                                     ----      ----     ----     ----      ----      ----
<S>                                 <C>       <C>       <C>      <C>      <C>       <C>
Aggregate projected benefit
  obligation......................  $3,482    $3,697    $ 255    $ 223    $3,737    $3,920
Aggregate contract value of plan
  assets (principally Company
  contracts)......................   4,726     4,403       --       --     4,726     4,403
                                    ------    ------    -----    -----    ------    ------
Over (under) funded...............  $1,244    $  706    $(255)   $(223)   $  989    $  483
                                    ======    ======    =====    =====    ======    ======
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   29
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The assumptions used in determining the aggregate projected benefit
obligation and aggregate contract value for the pension and other benefits were
as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            PENSION BENEFITS             OTHER BENEFITS
                                      ----------------------------   -----------------------
                                          1999            1998          1999         1998
                                          ----            ----          ----         ----
<S>                                   <C>             <C>            <C>          <C>
Weighted average assumptions at
  December 31,
Discount rate.......................  6.25% - 7.75%   6.5% - 7.25%   6% - 7.75%       7%
Expected rate of return on plan
  assets............................   8% - 10.5%     8.5% - 10.5%    6% - 9%     7.25% - 9%
Rate of compensation increase.......   4.5% - 8.5%    4.5% - 8.5%       N/A          N/A
</TABLE>

     The assumed health care cost trend rates used in measuring the accumulated
nonpension postretirement benefit obligation were 6.5% for pre-Medicare eligible
claims and 6% for Medicare eligible claims in both 1999 and 1998.

     Assumed health care cost trend rates may have a significant effect on the
amounts reported for health care plans. A one-percentage point change in assumed
health care cost trend rates would have the following effects:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             ONE PERCENT    ONE PERCENT
                                                              INCREASE       DECREASE
                                                             -----------    -----------
<S>                                                          <C>            <C>
Effect on total of service and interest cost components....     $ 14           $ 11
Effect of accumulated postretirement benefit obligation....     $134           $111
</TABLE>

     The components of periodic benefit costs were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               PENSION BENEFITS         OTHER BENEFITS
                                             ---------------------    ------------------
                                             1999    1998    1997     1999   1998   1997
                                             ----    ----    ----     ----   ----   ----
<S>                                          <C>     <C>     <C>      <C>    <C>    <C>
Service cost...............................  $ 100   $  90   $  74    $ 28   $ 31   $ 30
Interest cost..............................    271     257     247     107    114    122
Expected return on plan assets.............   (363)   (337)   (324)    (89)   (79)   (66)
Amortization of prior actuarial gains......     (6)    (11)     (5)    (11)   (13)    (4)
Curtailment (credit) cost..................    (17)    (10)     --      10      4     --
                                             -----   -----   -----    ----   ----   ----
Net periodic benefit cost (credit).........  $ (15)  $ (11)  $  (8)   $ 45   $ 57   $ 82
                                             =====   =====   =====    ====   ====   ====
</TABLE>

  SAVINGS AND INVESTMENT PLANS

     The Company sponsors savings and investment plans for substantially all
employees under which the Company matches a portion of employee contributions.
The Company contributed $45, $43 and $44 for the years ended December 31, 1999,
1998 and 1997, respectively.

6. SEPARATE ACCOUNTS

     Separate accounts reflect two categories of risk assumption: non-guaranteed
separate accounts totaling $47,618 and $39,490 at December 31, 1999 and 1998,
respectively, for which the policyholder assumes the investment risk, and
guaranteed separate accounts totaling $17,323 and $18,578 at December 31, 1999
and 1998, respectively, for which MetLife contractually guarantees either a
minimum return or account value to the policyholder.
<PAGE>   30
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Fees charged to the separate accounts by the Company (including mortality
charges, policy administration fees and surrender charges) are reflected in the
Company's revenues as universal life and investment-type product policy fees and
totaled $485, $413 and $287 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and
1997, respectively. Guaranteed separate accounts consisted primarily of Met
Managed Guaranteed Interest Contracts and participating close out contracts. The
average interest rates credited on these contracts were 6.5% and 7% at December
31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. The assets that support these liabilities were
comprised of $16,874 and $16,639 in fixed maturities at December 31, 1999 and
1998, respectively. The portfolios are segregated from other investments and are
managed to minimize liquidity and interest rate risk. In order to minimize the
risk of disintermediation associated with early withdrawals, these investment
products carry a graded surrender charge as well as a market value adjustment.

7. DEBT

     Debt consisted of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             DECEMBER 31,
                                                           ----------------
                                                            1999      1998
                                                            ----      ----
<S>                                                        <C>       <C>
MetLife:
  6.300% surplus notes due 2003..........................  $  397    $  397
  7.000% surplus notes due 2005..........................     249       249
  7.700% surplus notes due 2015..........................     198       198
  7.450% surplus notes due 2023..........................     296       296
  7.785% surplus notes due 2024..........................     148       148
  7.800% surplus notes due 2025..........................     248       248
Other....................................................     130       207
                                                           ------    ------
                                                            1,666     1,743
                                                           ------    ------
Investment related:
  Floating rate debt, interest based on LIBOR............      --       212
  Exchangeable debt, interest rates ranging from 4.90% to
     5.80%, due 2001 and 2002............................     369       371
                                                           ------    ------
                                                              369       583
                                                           ------    ------
Total MetLife............................................   2,035     2,326
                                                           ------    ------
Nvest:
  7.060% senior notes due 2003...........................     110       110
  7.290% senior notes due 2007...........................     160       160
                                                           ------    ------
                                                              270       270
                                                           ------    ------
Other Affiliated Companies:
  Fixed rate notes, interest rates ranging from 6.96% to
     8.51%, maturity dates ranging from 2000 to 2008.....     170       179
  Other..................................................      39       128
                                                           ------    ------
                                                              209       307
                                                           ------    ------
Total long-term debt.....................................   2,514     2,903
Total short-term debt....................................   4,208     3,585
                                                           ------    ------
                                                           $6,722    $6,488
                                                           ======    ======
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   31
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Short-term debt consisted of commercial paper with a weighted average
interest rate of 6.05% and 5.31% and a weighted average maturity of 74 and 44
days at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.

     The Company maintains unsecured credit facilities aggregating $7,000
(five-year facility of $1,000 expiring in April 2003; 364-day facility of $1,000
expiring in April 2000; 364-day facility of $5,000 expiring in September 2000).
Both $1,000 facilities bear interest at LIBOR plus 20 basis points. The $5,000
facility bears interest at various rates under specified borrowing scenarios.
The facilities can be used for general corporate purposes and also provide
backup for the Company's commercial paper program. At December 31, 1999, there
were no outstanding borrowings under any of the facilities.

     Payments of interest and principal on the surplus notes, subordinated to
all other indebtedness, may be made only with the prior approval of the
Superintendent. Subject to the prior approval of the Superintendent, the 7.45%
surplus notes may be redeemed, in whole or in part, at the election of the
Company at any time on or after November 1, 2003.

     Each issue of investment related debt is payable in cash or by delivery of
an underlying security owned by the Company. The amount payable at maturity of
the debt is greater than the principal of the debt if the market value of the
underlying security appreciates above certain levels at the date of debt
repayment as compared to the market value of the underlying security at the date
of debt issuance.

     The aggregate maturities of long-term debt are $93 in 2000, $194 in 2001,
$210 in 2002, $415 in 2003, $126 in 2004 and $1,477 thereafter.

     Interest expense related to the Company's outstanding indebtedness was
$358, $333 and $344 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997,
respectively.

8. ACQUISITIONS AND DISPOSITIONS

     In 1999 and 1997, respectively, the Company acquired assets of $4,832 and
$3,777 and assumed liabilities of $1,860 and $3,347 through the acquisition of
certain insurance and non-insurance operations. The aggregate purchase prices
were allocated to the assets and liabilities acquired based on their estimated
fair values.

     During 1998, the Company sold MetLife Capital Holdings, Inc. (a commercial
financing company) and a substantial portion of its Canadian and Mexican
insurance operations, which resulted in a realized investment gain of $531.
During 1997, the Company sold its United Kingdom insurance operations, which
resulted in a realized investment gain of $139. Such sales caused a reduction in
assets of $10,663 and $4,342 and liabilities of $3,691 and $4,207 in 1998 and
1997, respectively.

     See Note 16 for information regarding the Company's acquisition of
GenAmerica Corporation.

9. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES

  LITIGATION

     The Company is currently a defendant in approximately 500 lawsuits raising
allegations of improper marketing and sales of individual life insurance
policies or annuities. These lawsuits are generally referred to as "sales
practices claims".
<PAGE>   32
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     On December 28, 1999, after a fairness hearing, the United States District
Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania approved a class action
settlement resolving a multidistrict litigation proceeding involving alleged
sales practices claims. The settlement class includes most of the owners of
permanent life insurance policies and annuity contracts or certificates issued
pursuant to individual sales in the United States by Metropolitan Life Insurance
Company, Metropolitan Insurance and Annuity Company or Metropolitan Tower Life
Insurance Company between January 1, 1982 and December 31, 1997. This class
includes owners of approximately six million in-force or terminated insurance
policies and approximately one million in-force or terminated annuity contracts
or certificates.

     In addition to dismissing the consolidated class actions, the District
Court's order also bars sales practices claims by class members for sales by the
defendant insurers during the class period, effectively resolving all pending
class actions against these insurers. The defendants are in the process of
having these claims dismissed.

     Under the terms of the order, only those class members who excluded
themselves from the settlement may continue an existing, or start a new, sales
practices lawsuit against Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, Metropolitan
Insurance and Annuity Company or Metropolitan Tower Life Insurance Company for
sales that occurred during the class period. Approximately 20,000 class members
elected to exclude themselves from the settlement. Over 400 of the approximately
500 lawsuits noted above are brought by individuals who elected to exclude
themselves from the settlement.

     The settlement provides three forms of relief. General relief, in the form
of free death benefits, is provided automatically to class members who did not
exclude themselves from the settlement or who did not elect the claim evaluation
procedures set forth in the settlement. The claim evaluation procedures permit a
class member to have a claim evaluated by a third party under procedures set
forth in the settlement. Claim awards made under the claim evaluation procedures
will be in the form of policy adjustments, free death benefits or, in some
instances, cash payments. In addition, class members who have or had an
ownership interest in specified policies will also automatically receive
deferred acquisition cost tax relief in the form of free death benefits. The
settlement fixes the aggregate amounts that are available under each form of
relief.

     The Company expects that the total cost of the settlement will be
approximately $957. This amount is equal to the amount of the increase in
liabilities for the death benefits and policy adjustments and the present value
of expected cash payments to be provided to included class members, as well as
attorneys' fees and expenses and estimated other administrative costs, but does
not include the cost of litigation with policyholders who are excluded from the
settlement. The Company believes that the cost of the settlement will be
substantially covered by available reinsurance and the provisions made in its
consolidated financial statements, and thus will not have a material adverse
effect on its business, results of operations or financial position. The Company
has not yet made a claim under those reinsurance agreements and, although there
is a risk that the carriers will refuse coverage for all or part of the claim,
the Company believes this is very unlikely to occur. The Company believes it has
made adequate provision in its consolidated financial statements for all
probable losses for sales practices claims, including litigation costs involving
policyholders who are excluded from the settlement.

     The class action settlement does not resolve nine purported or certified
class actions currently pending against New England Mutual Life Insurance
Company with which the Company merged in 1996. Eight of those actions have been
consolidated as a multidistrict proceeding for pre-trial purposes in the United
States District Court in Massachusetts. That Court certified a mandatory class
as to those claims. Following an appeal of that certification, the United States
<PAGE>   33
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

Court of Appeals remanded the case to the District Court for further
consideration. The Company is negotiating a settlement with class counsel.

     The class action settlement also does not resolve three putative sales
practices class action lawsuits which have been brought against General American
Life Insurance Company. These lawsuits have been consolidated in a single
proceeding in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Missouri. General American Life Insurance Company and counsel for plaintiffs
have negotiated a settlement in principle of this consolidated proceeding.
General American Life Insurance Company has not reached agreement with
plaintiffs' counsel on the attorneys' fees to be paid. However, negotiations are
ongoing.

     In addition, the class action settlement does not resolve two putative
class actions involving sales practices claims filed against Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company in Canada. The class action settlement also does not resolve a
certified class action with conditionally certified subclasses against
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, Metropolitan Insurance and Annuity Company,
Metropolitan Tower Life Insurance Company and various individual defendants
alleging improper sales abroad. That lawsuit is pending in a New York federal
court.

     In the past, the Company has resolved some individual sales practices
claims through settlement, dispositive motion or, in a few instances, trial.
Most of the current cases seek substantial damages, including in some cases
punitive and treble damages and attorneys' fees. Additional litigation relating
to the Company's marketing and sales of individual life insurance may be
commenced in the future.

     Regulatory authorities in a small number of states, including both
insurance departments and one state attorney general, as well as the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., have ongoing investigations or
inquiries relating to the Company's sales of individual life insurance policies
or annuities, including investigations of alleged improper replacement
transactions and alleged improper sales of insurance with inaccurate or
inadequate disclosures as to the period for which premiums would be payable.
Over the past several years, the Company has resolved a number of investigations
by other regulatory authorities for monetary payments and certain other relief,
and may continue to do so in the future.

     MetLife is also a defendant in numerous lawsuits seeking compensatory and
punitive damages for personal injuries allegedly caused by exposure to asbestos
or asbestos-containing products. MetLife has never engaged in the business of
manufacturing, producing, distributing or selling asbestos or
asbestos-containing products. Rather, these lawsuits, currently numbering in the
thousands, have principally been based upon allegations relating to certain
research, publication and other activities of one or more of MetLife's employees
during the period from the 1920s through approximately the 1950s and alleging
that MetLife learned or should have learned of certain health risks posed by
asbestos and, among other things, improperly publicized or failed to disclose
those health risks. Legal theories asserted against MetLife have included
negligence, intentional tort claims and conspiracy claims concerning the health
risks associated with asbestos. While MetLife believes it has meritorious
defenses to these claims, and has not suffered any adverse judgments in respect
of these claims, most of the cases have been resolved by settlements. MetLife
intends to continue to exercise its best judgment regarding settlement or
defense of such cases. The number of such cases that may be brought or the
aggregate amount of any liability that MetLife may ultimately incur is
uncertain.

     Significant portions of amounts paid in settlement of such cases have been
funded with proceeds from a previously resolved dispute with MetLife's primary,
umbrella and first level excess liability insurance carriers. MetLife is
presently in litigation with several of its excess
<PAGE>   34
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

liability insurers regarding amounts payable under its policies with respect to
coverage for these claims. The trial court has granted summary judgment to these
insurers. MetLife has appealed. There can be no assurances regarding the outcome
of this litigation or the amount and timing of recoveries, if any, from these
excess liability insurers. MetLife's asbestos-related litigation with these
insurers should have no effect on recoveries under the excess insurance policies
described below.

     The Company has recorded, in other expenses, charges of $499 ($317
after-tax), $1,895 ($1,203 after-tax) and $300 ($190 after-tax) for the years
ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively, for sales practices claims
and claims for personal injuries caused by exposure to asbestos or
asbestos-containing products. The 1999 charge was principally related to the
settlement of the multidistrict litigation proceeding involving alleged improper
sales practices, accruals for sales practices claims not covered by the
settlement and other legal costs. The 1998 charge was comprised of $925 and $970
for sales practices claims and asbestos-related claims, respectively. The
Company recorded the charges for sales practices claims based on preliminary
settlement discussions and the settlement history of other insurers.

     Prior to the fourth quarter of 1998, the Company established a liability
for asbestos-related claims based on settlement costs for claims that the
Company had settled, estimates of settlement costs for claims pending against
the Company and an estimate of settlement costs for unasserted claims. The
amount for unasserted claims was based on management's estimate of unasserted
claims that would be probable of assertion. A liability is not established for
claims which management believes are only reasonably possible of assertion.
Based on this process, the accrual for asbestos-related claims at December 31,
1997 was $386. Potential liabilities for asbestos-related claims are not easily
quantified, due to the nature of the allegations against the Company, which are
not related to the business of manufacturing, producing, distributing or selling
asbestos or asbestos-containing products, adding to the uncertainty as to the
number of claims that may be brought against the Company.

     During 1998, the Company decided to pursue the purchase of excess insurance
to limit its exposure to asbestos-related claims. In connection with the
negotiations with the casualty insurers to obtain this insurance, the Company
obtained information that caused management to reassess the accruals for
asbestos-related claims. This information included:

     - Information from the insurers regarding the asbestos-related claims
       experience of other insureds, which indicated that the number of claims
       that were probable of assertion against the Company in the future was
       significantly greater than it had assumed in its accruals. The number of
       claims brought against the Company is generally a reflection of the
       number of asbestos-related claims brought against asbestos defendants
       generally and the percentage of those claims in which the Company is
       included as a defendant. The information provided to the Company relating
       to other insureds indicated that the Company had been included as a
       defendant for a significant percentage of total asbestos-related claims
       and that it may be included in a larger percentage of claims in the
       future, because of greater awareness of asbestos litigation generally by
       potential plaintiffs and plaintiffs' lawyers and because of the
       bankruptcy and reorganization or the exhaustion of insurance coverage of
       other asbestos defendants; and that, although volatile, there was an
       upward trend in the number of total claims brought against asbestos
       defendants.

     - Information derived from actuarial calculations the Company made in the
       fourth quarter of 1998 in connection with these negotiations, which
       helped to frame, define and quantify this liability. These calculations
       were made using, among other things, current information regarding the
       Company's claims and settlement experience (which reflected the Com-
<PAGE>   35
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

       pany's decision to resolve an increased number of these claims by
       settlement), recent and historic claims and settlement experience of
       selected other companies and information obtained from the insurers.

     Based on this information, the Company concluded that certain claims that
previously were considered as only reasonably possible of assertion were now
probable of assertion, increasing the number of assumed claims to approximately
three times the number assumed in prior periods. As a result of this
reassessment, the Company increased its liability for asbestos-related claims to
$1,278 at December 31, 1998.

     During 1998, the Company paid $1,407 of premiums for excess of loss
reinsurance agreements and excess insurance policies, consisting of $529 for the
excess of loss reinsurance agreements for sales practices claims and excess
mortality losses and $878 for the excess insurance policies for asbestos-related
claims.

     The Company obtained the excess of loss reinsurance agreements to provide
reinsurance with respect to sales practices claims made on or prior to December
31, 1999 and for certain mortality losses in 1999. These reinsurance agreements
have a maximum aggregate limit of $650, with a maximum sublimit of $550 for
losses for sales practices claims. This coverage is in excess of an aggregate
self-insured retention of $385 with respect to sales practices claims and $506,
plus the Company's statutory policy reserves released upon the death of
insureds, with respect to life mortality losses. At December 31, 1999, the
subject losses under the reinsurance agreements due to sales practices claims
and related counsel fees from the time the Company entered into the reinsurance
agreements did not exceed that self-insured retention. The maximum sublimit of
$550 for sales practices claims was within a range of losses that management
believed were reasonably possible at December 31, 1998. Each excess of loss
reinsurance agreement for sales practices claims and mortality losses contains
an experience fund, which provides for payments to the Company at the
commutation date if experience is favorable at such date. The Company accounts
for the aggregate excess of loss reinsurance agreements as reinsurance; however,
if deposit accounting were applied, the effect on the Company's consolidated
financial statements in 1998, 1999 and 2000 would not be significant.

     Under reinsurance accounting, the excess of the liability recorded for
sales practices losses recoverable under the agreements of $550 over the premium
paid of $529 results in a deferred gain of $21 which is being amortized into
income over the settlement period from January 1999 through April 2000. Under
deposit accounting, the premium would be recorded as an other asset rather than
as an expense, and the reinsurance loss recoverable and the deferred gain would
not have been recorded. Because the agreements also contain an experience fund
which increases with the passage of time, the increase in the experience fund in
1999 and 2000 under deposit accounting would be recognized as interest income in
an amount approximately equal to the deferred gain that will be amortized into
income under reinsurance accounting.

     The excess insurance policies for asbestos-related claims provide for
recovery of losses up to $1,500, which is in excess of a $400 self-insured
retention ($878 of which was recorded as a recoverable at December 31, 1999 and
1998). The asbestos-related policies are also subject to annual and per-claim
sublimits. Amounts are recoverable under the policies annually with respect to
claims paid during the prior calendar year. Although amounts paid in any given
year that are recoverable under the policies will be reflected as a reduction in
the Company's operating cash flows for that year, management believes that the
payments will not have a material adverse effect on the Company's liquidity.
Each asbestos-related policy contains an experience fund and a reference fund
that provides for payments to the Company at the commutation date if experience
under the policy to such date has been favorable, or pro rata reductions from
time to
<PAGE>   36
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

time in the loss reimbursements to the Company if the cumulative return on the
reference fund is less than the return specified in the experience fund.

     A purported class action suit involving policyholders in 32 states has been
filed in a Rhode Island state court against MetLife's subsidiary, Metropolitan
Property and Casualty Insurance Company, with respect to claims by policyholders
for the alleged diminished value of automobiles after accident-related repairs.
A similar "diminished value" allegation was made recently in a Texas Deceptive
Trade Practices Act letter and lawsuit which involve a Metropolitan Property and
Casualty Company policyholder. A purported class action has been filed against
Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company and its subsidiary,
Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company, in Florida by a policyholder alleging
breach of contract and unfair trade practices with respect to Metropolitan
Casualty Insurance Company allowing the use of parts not made by the original
manufacturer to repair damaged automobiles. These suits are in the early stages
of litigation and Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company and
Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company intend to vigorously defend themselves
against these suits. Similar suits have been filed against several other
personal lines property and casualty insurers.

     The United States, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and various hotels and
individuals have sued MetLife Capital Corporation, a former subsidiary of the
Company, seeking damages for clean up costs, natural resource damages, personal
injuries and lost profits and taxes based upon, among other things, a release of
oil from a barge which was being towed by the M/V Emily S. In connection with
the sale of MetLife Capital, the Company acquired MetLife Capital's potential
liability with respect to the M/V Emily S lawsuit. MetLife Capital had entered
into a sale and leaseback financing arrangement with respect to the M/V Emily S.
The plaintiffs have taken the position that MetLife Capital, as the owner of
record of the M/V Emily S, is responsible for all damages caused by the barge,
including the oil spill. The governments of the United States and Puerto Rico
have claimed damages in excess of $150. At a mediation, the action brought by
the United States and Puerto Rico was conditionally settled, provided that the
governments have access to additional sums from a fund contributed to by oil
companies to help remediate oil spills. The Company can provide no assurance
that this action will be settled in this manner.

     Three putative class actions have been filed by Conning Corporation
shareholders alleging that the Company's announced offer to purchase the
publicly-held Conning shares is inadequate and constitutes a breach of fiduciary
duty (see Note 16). The Company believes the actions are without merit, and
expects that they will not materially affect its offer to purchase the shares.

     A civil complaint challenging the fairness of the plan of reorganization
and the adequacy and accuracy of the disclosures to policyholders regarding the
plan has been filed in New York Supreme Court for Kings County on behalf of an
alleged class consisting of the policyholders of MetLife who should have
membership benefits in MetLife and were and are eligible to receive notice, vote
and receive consideration in the demutualization. The complaint seeks to enjoin
or rescind the plan and seeks other relief. The defendants named in the
complaint are MetLife and the individual members of its board of directors and
MetLife, Inc. MetLife believes that the allegations made in the complaint are
wholly without merit, and intends to vigorously contest the complaint.

     Various litigation, claims and assessments against the Company, in addition
to those discussed above and those otherwise provided for in the Company's
consolidated financial statements, have arisen in the course of the Company's
business, including, but not limited to, in connection with its activities as an
insurer, employer, investor, investment advisor and taxpayer. Further, state
insurance regulatory authorities and other Federal and state authorities
regularly
<PAGE>   37
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

make inquiries and conduct investigations concerning the Company's compliance
with applicable insurance and other laws and regulations.

     In some of the matters referred to above, very large and/or indeterminate
amounts, including punitive and treble damages, are sought. While it is not
feasible to predict or determine the ultimate outcome of all pending
investigations and legal proceedings or provide reasonable ranges of potential
losses, it is the opinion of the Company's management that their outcomes, after
consideration of available insurance and reinsurance and the provisions made in
the Company's consolidated financial statements, are not likely to have a
material adverse effect on the Company's consolidated financial position.
However, given the large and/or indeterminate amounts sought in certain of these
matters and the inherent unpredictability of litigation, it is possible that an
adverse outcome in certain matters could, from time to time, have a material
adverse effect on the Company's operating results or cash flows in particular
quarterly or annual periods.

  TRANSFERRED CANADIAN POLICIES

     In July 1998, MetLife sold a substantial portion of its Canadian operations
to Clarica Life. As part of that sale, a large block of policies in effect with
MetLife in Canada were transferred to Clarica Life, and the holders of the
transferred Canadian policies became policyholders of Clarica Life. Those
transferred policyholders are no longer policyholders of MetLife and, therefore,
are not entitled to compensation under the plan of reorganization. However, as a
result of a commitment made in connection with obtaining Canadian regulatory
approval of that sale, if MetLife demutualizes, its Canadian branch will make
cash payments to those who are, or are deemed to be, holders of those
transferred Canadian policies. The payments, which will be recorded in other
expenses in the same period as the effective date of the plan, will be
determined in a manner that is consistent with the treatment of, and fair and
equitable to, eligible policyholders of MetLife. The amount of the payment is
dependent upon the initial public offering price of common stock to be issued on
the effective date of the plan of demutualization.

  YEAR 2000

     The Year 2000 issue was the result of the widespread use of computer
programs written using two digits (rather than four) to define the applicable
year. Such programming was a common industry practice designed to avoid the
significant costs associated with additional mainframe capacity necessary to
accommodate a four-digit field. As a result, any of the Company's computer
systems that have time-sensitive software may recognize a date using "00" as the
year 1900 rather than the year 2000. This could result in major system failures
or miscalculations. The Company has conducted a comprehensive review of its
computer systems to identify the systems that could be affected by the Year 2000
issue and has implemented a plan to resolve the issue. There can be no
assurances that the Year 2000 plan of the Company or that of its vendors or
third parties have resolved all Year 2000 issues. Further, there can be no
assurance that there will not be any future system failure or that such failure,
if any, will not have a material impact on the operations of the Company.

  LEASES

     In accordance with industry practice, certain of the Company's income from
lease agreements with retail tenants is contingent upon the level of the
tenants' sales revenues. Additionally, the Company, as lessee, has entered into
various lease and sublease agreements
<PAGE>   38
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

for office space, data processing and other equipment. Future minimum rental and
subrental income and minimum gross rental payments relating to these lease
agreements were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      GROSS
                                               RENTAL    SUBLEASE     RENTAL
                                               INCOME     INCOME     PAYMENTS
                                               ------    --------    --------
<S>                                            <C>       <C>         <C>
2000.........................................  $  817      $13         $156
2001.........................................     740       12          135
2002.........................................     689       11          111
2003.........................................     612        9           90
2004.........................................     542        9           69
Thereafter...................................   2,032       27          299
</TABLE>

10. INCOME TAXES

     The provision for income taxes was as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                               ------------------------
                                                               1999      1998      1997
                                                               ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                           <C>       <C>       <C>
Current:
  Federal...................................................   $643      $668      $370
  State and local...........................................     24        60        10
  Foreign...................................................      4        99        26
                                                               ----      ----      ----
                                                                671       827       406
                                                               ----      ----      ----
Deferred:
  Federal...................................................    (78)      (25)       28
  State and local...........................................      2        (8)        9
  Foreign...................................................     (2)      (54)       25
                                                               ----      ----      ----
                                                                (78)      (87)       62
                                                               ----      ----      ----
Provision for income taxes..................................   $593      $740      $468
                                                               ====      ====      ====
</TABLE>

     Reconciliations of the income tax provision at the U.S. statutory rate to
the provision for income taxes as reported were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                               ------------------------
                                                               1999      1998      1997
                                                               ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                           <C>       <C>       <C>
Tax provision at U.S. statutory rate........................   $502      $730      $585
Tax effect of:
  Tax exempt investment income..............................    (39)      (40)      (30)
  Surplus tax...............................................    125        18       (40)
  State and local income taxes..............................     18        31        15
  Tax credits...............................................     (5)      (25)      (15)
  Prior year taxes..........................................    (31)        4        (2)
  Sale of businesses........................................     --       (19)      (41)
  Other, net................................................     23        41        (4)
                                                               ----      ----      ----
Provision for income taxes..................................   $593      $740      $468
                                                               ====      ====      ====
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   39
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Deferred income taxes represent the tax effect of the differences between
the book and tax basis of assets and liabilities. Net deferred income tax assets
and liabilities consisted of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             DECEMBER 31,
                                                           ----------------
                                                            1999      1998
                                                            ----      ----
<S>                                                        <C>       <C>
Deferred income tax assets:
  Policyholder liabilities and receivables...............  $3,042    $3,108
  Net operating losses...................................      72        22
  Net unrealized investment losses.......................     161        --
  Employee benefits......................................     192       174
  Litigation related.....................................     468       312
  Other..................................................     242       158
                                                           ------    ------
                                                            4,177     3,774
  Less: Valuation allowance..............................      72        21
                                                           ------    ------
                                                            4,105     3,753
                                                           ------    ------
Deferred income tax liabilities:
  Investments............................................   1,472     1,529
  Deferred policy acquisition costs......................   1,967     1,887
  Net unrealized investment gains........................      --       864
  Other..................................................      63        18
                                                           ------    ------
                                                            3,502     4,298
                                                           ------    ------
Net deferred income tax asset (liability)................  $  603    $ (545)
                                                           ======    ======
</TABLE>

     Foreign net operating loss carryforwards generated deferred income tax
benefits of $72 and $21 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. The Company
has recorded a valuation allowance related to these tax benefits. The valuation
allowance reflects management's assessment, based on available information, that
it is more likely than not that the deferred income tax asset for foreign net
operating loss carryforwards will not be realized. The benefit will be
recognized when management believes that it is more likely than not that the
portion of the deferred income tax asset is realizable.

     The Company has been audited by the Internal Revenue Service for the years
through and including 1993. The Company is being audited for the years 1994,
1995 and 1996. The Company believes that any adjustments that might be required
for open years will not have a material effect on the Company's consolidated
financial statements.

11. REINSURANCE

     The Company assumes and cedes insurance with other insurance companies. The
Company continually evaluates the financial condition of its reinsurers and
monitors concentration of credit risk in an effort to minimize its exposure to
significant losses from reinsurer insolvencies. The Company is contingently
liable with respect to ceded reinsurance should any reinsurer be unable to meet
its obligations under these agreements. The amounts in the consolidated
statements of income are presented net of reinsurance ceded.

     The Company's life insurance operations participate in reinsurance in order
to limit losses, minimize exposure to large risks and to provide additional
capacity for future growth. During
<PAGE>   40
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

1998, the Company began reinsuring, under yearly renewal term policies, 90
percent of the mortality risk on universal life policies issued after 1983. The
Company also reinsures 90 percent of the mortality risk on term life insurance
policies issued after 1995 under yearly renewal term policies and coinsures 100
percent of the mortality risk in excess of $25 and $35 on single and joint
survivorship policies, respectively.

     During 1997, the Company obtained a 100 percent coinsurance policy to
provide coverage for contractual payments generated by certain portions of the
Company's non-life contingency long-term guaranteed interest contracts and
structured settlement lump sum contracts issued during the periods 1991 through
1993. The policy was amended in 1998 to include structured settlement lump sum
payments issued during the period 1983 through 1990, 1994 and 1995. Reinsurance
recoverables under the contract, which has been accounted for as a financing
transaction, were $1,372 and $1,374 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.

     See Note 9 for information regarding certain excess of loss reinsurance
agreements providing coverage for risks associated primarily with sales
practices claims.

     The Company has exposure to catastrophes, which are an inherent risk of the
property and casualty insurance business and could contribute to material
fluctuations in the Company's results of operations. The Company uses excess of
loss and quota share reinsurance arrangements to limit its maximum loss, provide
greater diversification of risk and minimize exposure to larger risks. The
Company's reinsurance program is designed to limit a catastrophe loss to no more
than 10% of the Auto & Home segment's statutory surplus.

     The effects of reinsurance were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Direct premiums.....................................  $13,249    $12,763    $12,728
Reinsurance assumed.................................      484        409        360
Reinsurance ceded...................................   (1,645)    (1,669)    (1,810)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Net premiums........................................  $12,088    $11,503    $11,278
                                                      =======    =======    =======
Reinsurance recoveries netted against policyholder
  benefits..........................................  $ 1,626    $ 1,744    $ 1,648
                                                      =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

     The effects of reinsurance with GenAmerica Corporation ("GenAmerica") were
as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                            ------------------------
                                                            1999      1998      1997
                                                            ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                         <C>       <C>       <C>
Premiums ceded to GenAmerica..............................  $108      $113      $61
                                                            ====      ====      ===
Reinsurance recoveries from GenAmerica netted against
  policyholder benefits...................................  $ 74      $ 28      $24
                                                            ====      ====      ===
</TABLE>

     Reinsurance recoverables, included in other receivables, were $2,898 and
$3,134 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively, of which $5 and $5,
respectively, were recoverable from GenAmerica. Reinsurance and ceded
commissions payables, included in other liabilities, were $148 and $105 at
December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
<PAGE>   41
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The following provides an analysis of the activity in the liability for
benefits relating to property and casualty and group accident and non-medical
health policies and contracts:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Balance at January 1................................  $ 3,320    $ 3,655    $ 3,345
  Reinsurance recoverables..........................     (233)      (229)      (215)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Net balance at January 1............................    3,087      3,426      3,130
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Acquisition of business.............................      204         --         --
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Incurred related to:
  Current year......................................    3,129      2,726      2,855
  Prior years.......................................      (16)      (245)        88
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                        3,113      2,481      2,943
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Paid related to:
  Current year......................................   (2,128)    (1,967)    (1,832)
  Prior years.......................................     (759)      (853)      (815)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                       (2,887)    (2,820)    (2,647)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Balance at December 31..............................    3,517      3,087      3,426
  Add: Reinsurance recoverables.....................      272        233        229
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Balance at December 31..............................  $ 3,789    $ 3,320    $ 3,655
                                                      =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

12. OTHER EXPENSES

     Other expenses were comprised of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Compensation........................................  $ 2,590    $ 2,478    $ 2,078
Commissions.........................................      937        902        766
Interest and debt issue costs.......................      405        379        453
Amortization of policy acquisition costs (excludes
  amortization of $(46), $240 and $70, respectively,
  related to realized investment gains and
  (losses)).........................................      862        587        771
Capitalization of policy acquisition costs..........   (1,160)    (1,025)    (1,000)
Rent, net of sublease income........................      239        155        179
Minority interest...................................       55         67         56
Restructuring charge................................       --         81         --
Other...............................................    2,827      4,395      2,468
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                      $ 6,755    $ 8,019    $ 5,771
                                                      =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

     During 1998, the Company recorded charges of $81 to restructure
headquarters operations and consolidate certain agencies and other operations.
These costs have been fully paid at December 31, 1999.
<PAGE>   42
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

13. STATUTORY FINANCIAL INFORMATION

     The reconciliations of MetLife's statutory surplus and net change in
statutory surplus, determined in accordance with accounting practices prescribed
or permitted by insurance regulatory authorities, with equity and net income
determined in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles were as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 DECEMBER 31,
                                                              ------------------
                                                               1999       1998
                                                               ----       ----
<S>                                                           <C>        <C>
Statutory surplus...........................................  $ 7,630    $ 7,388
GAAP adjustments for:
  Future policy benefits and policyholder account
     balances...............................................   (4,167)    (6,830)
  Deferred policy acquisition costs.........................    8,381      6,560
  Deferred income taxes.....................................      886       (190)
  Valuation of investments..................................   (2,102)     3,981
  Statutory asset valuation reserves........................    3,189      3,381
  Statutory interest maintenance reserves...................    1,114      1,486
  Surplus notes.............................................   (1,602)    (1,595)
  Other, net................................................      361        686
                                                              -------    -------
Equity......................................................  $13,690    $14,867
                                                              =======    =======
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                          -------------------------
                                                          1999      1998      1997
                                                          ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                       <C>      <C>       <C>
Net change in statutory surplus.........................  $ 242    $   10    $  227
GAAP adjustments for:
  Future policy benefits and policyholder account
     balances...........................................    556       127       (38)
  Deferred policy acquisition costs.....................    379       224       149
  Deferred income taxes.................................    154       234        62
  Valuation of investments..............................    473     1,158      (387)
  Statutory asset valuation reserves....................   (226)     (461)    1,136
  Statutory interest maintenance reserves...............   (368)      312        53
  Other, net............................................   (593)     (261)        1
                                                          -----    ------    ------
Net income..............................................  $ 617    $1,343    $1,203
                                                          =====    ======    ======
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   43
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

14. OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)

     The following table sets forth the reclassification adjustments required
for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997 to avoid double-counting in
other comprehensive income (loss) items that are included as part of net income
for the current year that have been reported as a part of other comprehensive
income (loss) in the current or prior year:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               1999       1998       1997
                                                               ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                           <C>        <C>        <C>
Holding (losses) gains on investments arising during the
  year......................................................  $(6,314)   $ 1,493    $ 4,257
Income tax effect of holding gains or losses................    2,262       (617)    (1,615)
Transfer of securities from held-to-maturity to
  available-for-sale:
  Holding gains on investments..............................       --         --        198
  Income tax effect.........................................       --         --        (75)
Reclassification adjustments:
  Realized holding (gains) losses included in current year
     net income.............................................       38     (2,013)      (844)
  Amortization of premium and discount on investments.......     (307)      (350)      (209)
  Realized holding (losses) gains allocated to other
     policyholder amounts...................................      (67)       608        231
  Income tax effect.........................................      120        729        312
Allocation of holding losses (gains) on investments relating
  to other policyholder amounts.............................    3,788       (351)    (2,231)
Income tax effect of allocation of holding gains and losses
  to other policyholder amounts.............................   (1,357)       143        846
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Net unrealized investment (losses) gains....................   (1,837)      (358)       870
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Foreign currency translation adjustments arising during the
  year......................................................       50       (115)       (46)
Reclassification adjustment for sale of investment in
  foreign operation.........................................       --          2         (3)
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Foreign currency translation adjustment.....................       50       (113)       (49)
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Minimum pension liability adjustment........................       (7)       (12)        --
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Other comprehensive income (loss)...........................  $(1,794)   $  (483)   $   821
                                                              =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

15. BUSINESS SEGMENT INFORMATION

     The Company provides insurance and financial services to customers in the
United States, Canada, Central America, South America, Europe and Asia. The
Company's business is divided into six segments: Individual, Institutional, Auto
& Home, International, Asset Management and Corporate. These segments are
managed separately because they either provide different products and services,
require different strategies or have different technology requirements.

     Individual offers a wide variety of individual insurance and investment
products, including life insurance, annuities and mutual funds. Institutional
offers a broad range of group insurance and retirement and savings products and
services, including group life insurance, non-medical health insurance such as
short and long-term disability, long-term care and dental insurance and other
insurance products and services. Auto & Home provides insurance coverages
including private passenger automobile, homeowners and personal excess liability
insurance. International provides life insurance, accident and health insurance,
annuities and retirement and savings
<PAGE>   44
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

products to both individuals and groups, and auto and homeowners coverage to
individuals. Asset Management provides a broad variety of asset management
products and services to individuals and institutions such as mutual funds for
savings and retirement needs, commercial real estate advisory and management
services, and institutional and retail investment management. Through its
Corporate segment, the Company reports items that are not allocated to any of
the business segments.

     Set forth in the tables below is certain financial information with respect
to the Company's operating segments for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998
and 1997. The accounting policies of the segments are the same as those
described in the summary of significant accounting policies, except for the
method of capital allocation. The Company allocates capital to each segment
based upon an internal capital allocation system that allows the Company to more
effectively manage its capital. The Company has divested operations that did not
meet targeted rates of return, including its commercial leasing business
(Corporate segment) and substantial portions of its Canadian operations
(International segment), and insurance operations in the United Kingdom
(International segment). The Company evaluates the performance of each operating
segment based upon income or loss from operations before provision for income
taxes and non-recurring items (e.g. items of unusual or infrequent nature). The
Company allocates non-recurring items (primarily consisting of sales practices
claims and claims for personal injuries caused by exposure to asbestos or
asbestos-containing products) and prior to its sale in 1998, the results of
MetLife Capital Holdings, Inc. to the Corporate segment.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        AUTO
AT OR FOR THE YEAR ENDED                                 &                        ASSET                  CONSOLIDATION/
   DECEMBER 31, 1999      INDIVIDUAL   INSTITUTIONAL    HOME    INTERNATIONAL   MANAGEMENT   CORPORATE    ELIMINATION      TOTAL
- ------------------------  ----------   -------------    ----    -------------   ----------   ---------   --------------    -----
<S>                       <C>          <C>             <C>      <C>             <C>          <C>         <C>              <C>
Premiums................   $  4,289       $ 5,525      $1,751      $  523         $   --      $    --       $    --       $ 12,088
Universal life and
  investment-type
  product policy fees...        888           502          --          48             --           --            --          1,438
Net investment income...      5,346         3,755         103         206             80          605          (279)         9,816
Other revenues..........        558           629          21          12            803           59            72          2,154
Net realized investment
  gains (losses)........        (14)          (31)          1           1             --          (41)           14            (70)
Policyholder benefits
  and claims............      4,625         6,712       1,301         463             --           --             4         13,105
Interest credited to
  policyholder account
  balances..............      1,359         1,030          --          52             --           --            --          2,441
Policyholder
  dividends.............      1,509           159          --          22             --           --            --          1,690
Other expenses..........      2,719         1,589         514         248            795        1,031          (141)         6,755
Income (loss) before
  provision for income
  taxes and
  extraordinary item....        855           890          61           5             88         (408)          (56)         1,435
Income (loss) after
  provision for income
  taxes before
  extraordinary item....        555           567          56          21             51         (358)          (50)           842
Total assets............    109,401        88,127       4,443       4,381          1,036       19,834        (1,990)       225,232
Deferred policy
  acquisition costs.....      8,049           106          93         244             --           --            --          8,492
Separate account
  assets................     28,828        35,236          --         877             --           --            --         64,941
Policyholder
  liabilities...........     72,956        47,781       2,318       2,187             --            6          (293)       124,955
Separate account
  liabilities...........     28,828        35,236          --         877             --           --            --         64,941
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   45
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        AUTO
AT OR FOR THE YEAR ENDED                                 &                        ASSET                  CONSOLIDATION/
   DECEMBER 31, 1998      INDIVIDUAL   INSTITUTIONAL    HOME    INTERNATIONAL   MANAGEMENT   CORPORATE    ELIMINATION      TOTAL
- ------------------------  ----------   -------------    ----    -------------   ----------   ---------   --------------    -----
<S>                       <C>          <C>             <C>      <C>             <C>          <C>         <C>              <C>
Premiums................   $  4,323       $ 5,159      $1,403      $  618         $   --      $    --       $    --       $ 11,503
Universal life and
  investment-type
  product policy fees...        817           475          --          68             --           --            --          1,360
Net investment income...      5,480         3,885          81         343             75          682          (318)        10,228
Other revenues..........        474           575          36          33            817          111           (52)         1,994
Net realized investment
  gains.................        659           557         122         117             --          679          (113)         2,021
Policyholder benefits
  and claims............      4,606         6,416       1,029         597             --          (10)           --         12,638
Interest credited to
  policyholder account
  balances..............      1,423         1,199          --          89             --           --            --          2,711
Policyholder
  dividends.............      1,445           142          --          64             --           --            --          1,651
Other expenses..........      2,577         1,613         386         352            799        2,601          (309)         8,019
Income (loss) before
  provision for income
  taxes and
  extraordinary item....      1,702         1,281         227          77             93       (1,119)         (174)         2,087
Income (loss) after
  provision for income
  taxes before
  extraordinary item....      1,069           846         161          56             49         (691)         (143)         1,347
Total assets............    103,614        88,741       2,763       3,432          1,164       20,852        (5,220)       215,346
Deferred policy
  acquisition costs.....      6,194            82          57         205             --           --            --          6,538
Separate account
  assets................     23,013        35,029          --          26             --           --            --         58,068
Policyholder
  liabilities...........     71,571        49,406       1,477       2,043             --            1          (295)       124,203
Separate account
  liabilities...........     23,013        35,029          --          26             --           --            --         58,068
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         AUTO
AT OR FOR THE YEAR ENDED                                  &                        ASSET                  CONSOLIDATION/
    DECEMBER 31, 1997      INDIVIDUAL   INSTITUTIONAL    HOME    INTERNATIONAL   MANAGEMENT   CORPORATE    ELIMINATION      TOTAL
- ------------------------   ----------   -------------    ----    -------------   ----------   ---------   --------------    -----
<S>                        <C>          <C>             <C>      <C>             <C>          <C>         <C>              <C>
Premiums.................   $ 4,327        $ 4,689      $1,354      $  908         $   --      $    --       $    --       $ 11,278
Universal life and
  investment-type product
  policy fees............       855            426          --         137             --           --            --          1,418
Net investment income....     4,754          3,754          71         504             78          700          (370)         9,491
Other revenues...........       338            357          25          54            682           19            16          1,491
Net realized investment
  gains..................       356             45           9         142             --          326           (91)           787
Policyholder benefits and
  claims.................     4,597          5,934       1,003         869             --           --            --         12,403
Interest credited to
  policyholder account
  balances...............     1,422          1,319          --         137             --           --            --          2,878
Policyholder dividends...     1,340            305          --          97             --           --            --          1,742
Other expenses...........     2,394          1,178         351         497            679          966          (294)         5,771
Income before provision
  for income taxes.......       877            535         105         145             81           79          (151)         1,671
Income after provision
  for income taxes.......       599            339          74         126             45          163          (143)         1,203
Total assets.............    95,323         83,473       2,542       7,412          1,136       18,641        (5,745)       202,782
Deferred policy
  acquisition costs......     5,912             40          56         428             --           --            --          6,436
Separate account assets..    17,345         30,473          --         520             --           --            --         48,338
Policyholder
  liabilities............    70,686         49,547       1,509       5,615             --            1            --        127,358
Separate account
  liabilities............    17,345         30,473          --         520             --           --            --         48,338
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   46
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The Individual segment includes an equity ownership interest in Nvest
Companies, L.P. ("Nvest") under the equity method of accounting. Nvest has been
included within the Asset Management segment due to the types of products and
strategies employed by the entity. The individual segment's equity in earnings
of Nvest, which is included in net investment income, was $48, $49 and $45 for
the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively. The investment
in Nvest was $196, $252 and $216 at December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997,
respectively.

     Net investment income and net realized investment gains are based upon the
actual results of each segment's specifically identifiable asset portfolio.
Other costs and operating costs were allocated to each of the segments based
upon: (1) a review of the nature of such costs, (2) time studies analyzing the
amount of employee compensation costs incurred by each segment, and (3) cost
estimates included in the Company's product pricing.

     The consolidation/elimination column includes the elimination of all
intersegment amounts and the Individual segment's ownership interest in Nvest.
The principal component of the intersegment amounts related to intersegment
loans, which bore interest at rates commensurate with related borrowings.

     Revenues derived from any customer did not exceed 10% of consolidated
revenues. Revenues from U.S. operations were $24,637, $25,643 and $22,664 for
the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively, which
represented 97%, 96% and 93%, respectively, of consolidated revenues.

16. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

     On January 6, 2000, the Company acquired GenAmerica for $1.2 billion. In
connection with this acquisition, the Company incurred $900 of short-term debt.
GenAmerica is a holding company which includes General American Life Insurance
Company, 48.3% of the outstanding shares of Reinsurance Group of America ("RGA")
common stock, a provider of reinsurance, and 61.0% of the outstanding shares of
Conning Corporation common stock, an asset manager. On January 18, 2000, the
Company announced that it had proposed to acquire all of the outstanding shares
of Conning common stock not already owned by it for $10.50 per share in cash, or
approximately $55. At December 31, 1999, the Company owned 9.6% of the
outstanding shares of RGA common stock which were acquired on November 24, 1999
for $125. Subsequent to the GenAmerica acquisition, the Company owned 57.9% of
the outstanding shares of RGA common stock. Total assets, revenues and net loss
of GenAmerica were $23,594, $3,916 and $(174), respectively, at or for the year
ended December 31, 1999.

     As part of the acquisition agreement, in September 1999 the Company assumed
$5,752 of General American Life funding agreements and received cash of $1,926
and investment assets with a market value of $3,826. In October 1999, as part of
the assumption arrangement, the holders of General American Life funding
agreements aggregating $5,136 elected to have the Company redeem the funding
agreements for cash. General American Life agreed to pay the Company a fee of
$120 in connection with the assumption of the funding agreements. The fee will
be considered as part of the purchase price to be allocated to the fair value of
assets and liabilities acquired. The Company also agreed to make a capital
contribution of $120 to General American Life after the completion of the
acquisition.

     At the date of the acquisition agreement, the Company and GenAmerica were
parties to a number of reinsurance agreements. In addition, as part of the
acquisition, the Company entered into agreements effective as of July 25, 1999,
which coinsured new and certain existing business of General American Life and
some of its affiliates. See Note 11.

<PAGE>




                                                                               U

                                                                               L

                                                                               I

                                                                               I




                                   PROSPECTUS
                                      FOR

                     UL II, a Flexible Premium Multifunded
                             Life Insurance Policy
                 Issued by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company

                                May 1, 2000

The Policy is designed to provide:

 . Life insurance coverage

 . Flexible premium payments

 . A choice among three death benefit options

 . Funding options for allocating premium payments to and transferring cash value
among a fixed interest account and the following Metropolitan Life Separate
Account UL investment divisions which invest in the corresponding portfolios of
the Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc. and series of the New England Zenith Fund
(each a "Fund"), subject to state approval. For convenience, both portfolios
and the series are referred to as "Portfolios" in this Prospectus:


Metropolitan Series Fund,
Inc. Portfolios:

State Street Research Money      Janus Mid Cap
Market
Lehman Brothers(R) Aggregate     State Street Research Aggressive
Bond Index*
State Street Research Income        Growth
State Street Research            Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond
Diversified
MetLife Stock Index              Russell 2000(R) Index*
Harris Oakmark Large Cap         T. Rowe Price Small Cap Growth
Value*
T. Rowe Price Large Cap          State Street Research Aurora
Growth*
State Street Research Growth        Small Cap Value*
Putnam Large Cap Growth*         Scudder Global Equity
MetLife Mid Cap Stock Index*     Morgan Stanley EAFE(R) Index*
Neuberger Berman Partners        Putnam International Stock (formerly Santander
Mid Cap Value*                   International Stock)


New England Zenith Fund
Portfolios:

Davis Venture Value*             Loomis Sayles Small Cap*

* Available on or about July 5, 2000.

A word about risk:

This Prospectus discusses the risks associated with purchasing the Policy.
Other prospectuses discuss the risks associated with investment in the Fund
described therein. These prospectuses are being provided to you in addition to
this Prospectus because each of the Separate Account UL investment divisions
named above invests solely in a corresponding "Portfolio" of a Fund. This
Prospectus is not valid unless you also receive or have received current Fund
prospectuses.

The purchase of the Policy involves risk. You could lose money. You might have
to pay additional amounts of premium to avoid losing the life insurance
protection you purchased through a Policy.

How to learn more:

Before purchasing a Policy, read the information in this Prospectus and in each
Fund prospectus. Keep these prospectuses for future reference.

                                  -----------

Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") nor any state securities
authority has approved or disapproved these securities, nor have they
determined if this Prospectus is accurate or complete. This prospectus does not
constitute an offering in any jurisdiction where such offering may not lawfully
be made. Any representation otherwise is a criminal offense. Interests in the
Separate Account and the Fixed Account are not deposits or obligations of, or
insured or guaranteed by, the U.S. Government, any bank or other depository
institution including the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC"), the
Federal Reserve Board or any other agency or entity or person. We do not
authorize any representations about this offering other than as contained in
this Prospectus or its supplements or in our authorized supplemental sales
material.
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         Page
                                                                       in this
   Subject                                                            Prospectus
   -------                                                            ----------
   <S>                                                                <C>
   Summary...........................................................      2
   MetLife...........................................................      6
   Separate Account UL...............................................      7
   The Fixed Account.................................................      8
   The Funds.........................................................      8
   Issuing a Policy..................................................      9
   Policy Benefits...................................................     10
   Policy Rights.....................................................     14
   Payment and Allocation of Premiums................................     18
   Charges and Deductions............................................     19
   Federal Tax Matters...............................................     22
   Showing Performance...............................................     23
   Rights We Reserve.................................................     24
   Other Policy Provisions...........................................     24
   Sales and Administration of the Policies..........................     25
   Voting Rights.....................................................     26
   Reports...........................................................     27
   Illustration of Policy Benefits...................................     28
   Getting More Information..........................................     28
   Legal, Accounting and Actuarial Matters...........................     28
   Management........................................................     29
   Financial Statements..............................................     32
</TABLE>

Summary

This summary gives an overview of the Policy and is qualified by the more
detailed information in the balance of this Prospectus and the Policy.

MetLife issues the Policy. The Policy is designed to meet your changing life
insurance needs. In addition to the base Policy, optional insurance benefits
may also be added to your coverage.

Premiums

The Policy allows flexibility in making premium payments. There are certain
minimum premium requirements during the first two Policy years. Other than
these minimum premium payment requirements, the Policy will remain in force as
long as the cash surrender value is large enough to cover one monthly
deduction, regardless of whether or not premium payments have been made.

Cash Value

Your cash value in the Policy reflects your premium payments, the charges we
deduct, interest we credit if you have cash value in our fixed interest
account, any investment experience you have in our Separate Account, as well as
your loan and withdrawal activity. MetLife doesn't guarantee the investment
performance of the Separate Account UL investment divisions and you should
consider your risk tolerance before selecting any of these funding options.

                                       2
<PAGE>




Transfers and Automated Investment Strategies

You may transfer cash value among the funding options, subject to certain
limits. You may also choose among four automated investment strategies: the
Equity Generator SM, the Equalizer SM, the Allocator SM and the Rebalancer SM.

Specified Face Amount of Insurance

Within certain limits, you may choose your specified face amount of insurance
when the Policy is issued. You may also change the amount after the second
Policy year, subject to our rules and procedures.

Death Benefit Options

Generally, you have a choice among three options. These range from an amount
equal to the specified face amount to an amount equal to the specified face
amount plus the policy cash value at the date of death.

Surrenders, Partial Withdrawals and Loans

Within certain limits, you may take partial withdrawals and loans from the
Policy. You may also surrender your Policy for its cash surrender value.

Tax Treatment

In most cases, you will not pay income taxes on withdrawals or surrenders or at
the Final Date of the Policy, until your cumulative withdrawn amounts exceed
the cumulative premiums you have paid. If your Policy is a modified endowment
contract, you will pay income taxes on loans and withdrawals to the extent of
any gains (which is generally the excess of cash value over the premiums paid).
In this case, an additional 10% tax may also apply. If the Policy is part of a
collateral assignment equity split dollar arrangement with an employer, any
increases in cash value that are not due to premium payments may be taxed
annually. The death benefit may be subject to Federal and state estate taxes,
but your beneficiary will generally not be subject to income tax on the death
benefit. As with any taxation matter, you should consult with and rely on the
advice of your own tax advisor.

Table of Charges and Expenses

This table shows the charges and expenses that you pay under your Policy. See
"Charges and Deductions," below for more information your Policy's charges:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
        Type of Charge or Expense              Amount of Charge or Expense
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <C>                                   <S>
  Charges we deduct from each premium
   payment
   Sales charge:                        2% of each premium payment
   Charge for average expected state
    taxes attributable to premiums:     2% of each premium payment
   Charge for expected federal taxes
    attributable to premiums:           1.50% of each premium payment
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Monthly Deduction from your Policy's
   cash value
   Cost of term insurance charges:      Amount varies depending on the specifics
                                        of your Policy/2/
   Administration charge:               $.25 per $1,000 of specified face amount
                                        per month, plus
   First Policy year/3/:
                                        (a) $5 per month for insureds Age 17 and
                                        under
                                        (b) $15 per month for insureds age 18-49
                                        (c) $20 per month for insureds Age 50
                                        and over.
</TABLE>

                                       3
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
        Type of Charge or Expense              Amount of Charge or Expense
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <C>                                   <S>
   Second and later Policy years/3/:    (a) $5 per month for a specified face
                                        amount of $250,000 or more
                                        (b) $7 per month for a specified face
                                        amount between $100,000 and $249,999
                                        (c) $9 per month for a specified face
                                        amount of less than $100,000.
   Mortality and expense risk charge:   Annual rate of .90% of the average daily
                                        value of the assets in the Separate
                                        Account on each monthly anniversary.
   Underwriting charge: (applies only   Maximum charge of $5 for each $1,000 of
    if you request an increase in your  specified face amount increase.
    specified face amount)              Currently, the charge will not exceed
                                        the lesser of:
                                        . $2,500; or
                                        . $100 for the first $100,000 of face
                                         increase and $3 per thousand thereafter
   Charge for optional benefits added   As specified in the form of each rider.
    by rider:
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Surrender charge:
   Full surrender or termination of     The charge ranges from $30 to $1 per
    your Policy during the 15 years     thousand dollars/4/ of the highest level
    after we issue your Policy or after of specified face amount (excluding
    you have increased your policy's    changes in specified face amount that
    specified face amount:              are the result of a change in death
                                        benefit option) that the Policy has ever
                                        had and is based on:
                                        . the insured's age at the time of
                                         Policy issue or any increase in
                                         specified face amount,
                                        . the death benefit option in effect at
                                         the time of Policy issue or any
                                         increase in specified face amount, and
                                        . the number of Policy years since issue
                                         or increase in specified face amount.
                                        In no event will the surrender charge
                                        during the first two Policy years,
                                        together with all premium expense
                                        charges deducted (other than the 2%
                                        charge for state premium taxes and that
                                        portion of the DAC tax charge that is
                                        not considered to be sales load) exceed
                                        the sum of:
                                        . 30% of premium payments in aggregate
                                         amount less than or equal to one
                                         guideline annual premium/5/, plus
                                        . 10% of premium payments in aggregate
                                         amount greater than one guideline
                                         annual premium but not more than two
                                         guideline annual premiums, plus
                                        . 9% of each premium payment in excess
                                         of two guideline annual premiums.
                                        A comparable limit applies to the
                                        surrender charge attributable to a
                                        specified face amount increase for a
                                        period of two years following the
                                        increase./6/
   Partial withdrawals:                 No surrender charge
</TABLE>
- --------
/1/Charges for any insurance coverage provided by any riders you choose will be
included as part of the monthly deduction.
/2/See "Cost of Term Insurance" under "Charges and Deductions" for a more
detailed discussion of factors affecting this charge. If you would like, we
will provide you with an illustration of the impact of these and other charges
under the Policy based on various assumptions.
/3/We will deduct the portion of the first year's administration charges
referred to in (a), (b) and (c) that remain unpaid at the time of any full
surrender or other termination of your Policy during its first year.
/4/The Surrender Charge tables are set forth below under "Charges and
Deductions--Surrender Charge."
/5/The Guideline Annual Premium is the level annual amount of premium that
would be payable through the Final Date of a Policy for the specified face
amount of the Policy if we fixed premiums as to both timing and amount based on
1980 Commissioners Standard Ordinary Mortality Tables, net investment earnings
at an annual effective rate of 5%, and fees and charges as set forth in the
Policy and any Policy riders.
/6/To compute this limit a portion of each premium paid after the increase will
be attributed to the increase, as prescribed by SEC rule.

                                       4
<PAGE>


Fund Investment Management Fees and Direct Expenses

The investment manager of each of the Funds receives an investment management
fee. Each of the Funds also incurs direct expenses (see the Fund Prospectus and
Statement of Additional Information referred to therein for each Fund). You
bear indirectly your proportionate share of the fees and expenses of the
Portfolios of each Fund that correspond to the Separate Account investment
divisions you are using. The following sets forth the fees and expenses for
each Portfolio, expressed as a percentage of average net assets, for the year
ending 12/31/99 for all Portfolios of each Fund, except those Portfolios
(referred to in footnote (d) to the table) to be introduced on or about July 5,
2000, for which estimates for the first year are used. The percentages in the
table are before taking into account the expense reimbursements referred to in
the footnotes that follow the table.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             Total                                      Total
                          Manage-   Other    Annual                  Manage-   Other    Annual
       Portfolios         ment Fee Expenses Expenses  Portfolios     ment Fee Expenses Expenses
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>             <C>      <C>      <C>
                                                       Neuberger
                                                       Berman
                                                       Partners
State Street Research                                  Mid Cap
Money Market                .25%     .17%     .42%     Value(a)(b)     .70%     .48%    1.18%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lehman Brothers(R)
Aggregate Bond Index        .25%     .15%     .40%     Janus Mid Cap   .67%     .04%     .71%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       State Street
                                                       Research
State Street Research                                  Aggressive
Income                      .32%     .06%     .38%     Growth(a)       .70%     .04%     .74%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Loomis Sayles
State Street Research                                  High Yield
Diversified(a)              .43%     .03%     .46%     Bond            .70%     .24%     .94%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Russell
                                                       2000(R)
MetLife Stock Index         .25%     .04%     .29%     Index(e)        .25%     .64%     .89%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       T. Rowe Price
Harris Oakmark Large Cap                               Small Cap
Value(a)(b)                 .75%     .40%    1.15%     Growth(a)       .52%     .09%     .61%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Loomis Sayles
T. Rowe Price Large Cap                                Small
Growth(a)(b)                .69%     .62%    1.31%     Cap(c)(f)       .90%     .10%    1.00%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       State Street
                                                       Research
State Street Research                                  Aurora Small
Growth(a)                   .47%     .04%     .51%     Cap Value(d)    .85%     .23%    1.08%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Scudder
Davis Venture Value(c)      .75%     .06%     .81%     Global Equity   .67%     .20%     .87%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Morgan
                                                       Stanley
Putnam Large Cap                                       EAFE(R)
Growth(d)                   .80%     .59%    1.39%     Index(g)        .30%    1.47%    1.77%
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Putnam
MetLife Mid Cap Stock                                  International
Index(d)                    .25%     .65%     .90%     Stock           .90%     .22%    1.12%
</TABLE>
- --------

(a) The Metropolitan Series Fund directed certain portfolio trades to brokers
who paid a portion of the Fund's expenses. In addition, the Fund has entered
into arrangements with its custodian whereby credits realized as a result of
this practice were used to reduce a portion of each Portfolio's custodian fees.
These expense reductions are reflected in the table following (g) below.

(b) During 1999, we paid all expenses (other than management fees, brokerage
commissions, taxes, interest, extraordinary and non-recurring expenses)
(hereinafter "Expenses") in excess of .20% of the average net assets for each
of these Portfolios. This subsidy ceases when each Portfolio's assets reaches
$100 million or on November 8, 2000, whichever comes first. This expense
reimbursement is reflected in the table following (g) below. It states our
estimate of the effect of the anticipated reimbursement of expenses for the
entire current year.

                                       5
<PAGE>


(c) New England Investment Management, Inc. ("NEIM") pays MetLife for
providing administrative services. You do not bear these fees. NEIM absorbs
the fees payable to MetLife.

(d) These Portfolios will begin operations on or about July 5, 2000, except
for the Putnam Large Cap Growth Portfolio which will begin operations on May
1, 2000, but will not be available until on or about July 5, 2000. We will pay
all Expenses in excess of .20% of the average net assets for each of these
Portfolios until each Portfolio's total assets reaches $100 million or until
July 4, 2002, whichever comes first. Therefore, the expenses for these
Portfolios will be lower than those indicated in the table above. The table
following (g) below shows estimated first year expenses for these Portfolios
after expense reimbursement.

(e) We ceased subsidizing expenses for this Portfolio during 1999. The expense
information in the above table has been restated to reflect current expenses
as if they had been in effect all year. Beginning on February 22, 2000, we
began to pay all Expenses in excess of .30% of the average net assets for the
Russell 2000(R) Index Portfolio until the Portfolio's assets reach $200
million or until April 30, 2001, whichever comes first. This expense
reimbursement is reflected in the table following (g) below and is stated as
if it was in effect for the entire current year.

(f) NEIM pays all expenses other than brokerage costs, interest, taxes or
other extraordinary expenses in excess of 1.00% of the average net assets for
this Portfolio.

(g) We pay all Expenses in excess of .25% the average net assets for the
Morgan Stanley EAFE(R) Index Portfolio until the Portfolio's assets reach $100
million, or until November 8, 2000, whichever comes first. After such date,
MetLife will continue to pay all Expenses in excess of .40% of the Portfolio's
average net assets until the Portfolio's assets reach $200 million, or until
April 30, 2001, whichever comes first. These expense reimbursements are
reflected in the table below. It states our estimate of the effect of these
anticipated reimbursements of expenses for the entire current year.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            Total                                   Total
                              Other        Annual                     Other        Annual
                            Expenses      Expenses                  Expenses      Expenses
                          After Expense After Expense             After Expense After Expense
       Portfolio          Reimbursement Reimbursement Portfolio   Reimbursement Reimbursement
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>           <C>           <C>         <C>           <C>
                                                      Neuberger
                                                      Berman
                                                      Partners
State Street Research                                 Mid Cap
Diversified                   .02%           .45%     Value           .06%           .76%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      State
                                                      Street
                                                      Research
Harris Oakmark Large Cap                              Aggressive
Value                         .19%           .94%     Growth          .02%           .72%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      Russell
T. Rowe Price Large Cap                               2000(R)
Growth                        .24%           .93%     Index           .30%           .55%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      T. Rowe
                                                      Price
State Street Research                                 Small Cap
Growth                        .02%           .49%     Growth          .09%           .61%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      State
                                                      Street
                                                      Research
                                                      Aurora
                                                      Small Cap
Putnam Large Cap Growth       .20%          1.00%     Value           .20%          1.05%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      Morgan
                                                      Stanley
MetLife Mid Cap Stock                                 EAFE(R)
Index                         .20%           .45%     Index           .36%           .66%
</TABLE>

Other

Please refer to "Federal Tax Matters-Our taxation" and "Policy Benefits--Cash
Value Transfers" for a description of certain charges that we currently do not
impose but may impose in the future.

MetLife

Metropolitan Life Insurance Company ("MetLife") is a wholly-owned subsidiary
of MetLife, Inc., a publicly traded company. Our main office is located at One
Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10010. MetLife was formed under the laws of
New York State in 1868. Headquartered in New York City, we are a leading
provider of insurance and financial services to a broad spectrum of individual
and group customers. With approximately

                                       6
<PAGE>


[SIDEBAR: You can contact us at our Designated Office.]



$420 billion of assets under management as of December 31, 1999 on a pro-forma
basis, including the acquisition of GenAmerica Corp., MetLife provides
individual insurance and investment products to approximately 9 million
households in the United States. MetLife also provides group insurance and
investment products to corporations and other institutions employing over 33
million employees and members. We have listed our directors and certain key
officers under "Management," and our financial information under "Financial
Statements", below.

Giving us requests, instructions or notifications

Contacting us:

You can communicate all of your requests, instructions and notifications to us
by contacting us in writing at our Designated Office. We may require that
certain requests, instructions and notifications be made on forms that we
provide. These include: changing your beneficiary; taking a Policy loan;
changing your death benefit option; taking a partial withdrawal; surrendering
your Policy; making transfer requests (including elections with respect to the
automated investment strategies) or changing your premium allocations. Our
Designated Office is our home office at 1 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10010.
We may name additional or alternate Designated Offices. If we do, we will
notify you in writing.

When your requests, instructions and notifications become effective:

 . Generally, requests, premium payments premium allocation and transfer
  requests and other instructions and notifications are effective on the Date
  of Receipt. In those cases, the effective time is at the end of the Valuation
  Period during which we receive them at our Designated Office. (Some
  exceptions to this general rule are noted below and elsewhere in this
  Prospectus.)


 . A Valuation Period is the period between two successive Valuation Dates. It
   begins at the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange on a
   Valuation Date and ends at the close of regular trading on the New York
   Stock Exchange on the next succeeding Valuation Date. The close of regular
   trading is 4:00 p.m., Eastern Time on most days.

 . A Valuation Date is:

  . Each day on which the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading.

  . Other days, if we think that there has been a sufficient degree of
    trading in a Fund's portfolio securities that the current net asset value
    of its shares might be materially affected.

 . Your Investment Start Date is the date the first net premium is applied to
  the Fixed Account or Separate Account and is the later of (1) the Date of
  Policy and (2) the Date of Receipt of your first premium payment.

 . The effective date of your Automated Investment Strategies will be that set
  forth in the strategy chosen.

Separate Account UL

We established the Separate Account under New York law on December 13, 1988.
The Separate Account receives premium payments from the Policy described in
this Prospectus and other variable life insurance policies that we issue. We
have registered the Separate Account as a unit investment trust

                                       7
<PAGE>


[SIDEBAR: Each Separate Account investment division invests in a corresponding
Portfolio of a Fund.]

[SIDEBAR: You should carefully review the investment objectives, strategies,
and risks of each Fund's Portfolios, which are contained in each Fund
prospectus you have also received.]

under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act"). The assets in the
Separate Account legally belong to us, but they are held solely for the benefit
of investors in the Separate Account and no one else, including our other
creditors. We will keep an amount in the Separate Account that at least equals
the value of our commitments to policy owners that are based on their
investments in the Separate Account. We can also keep charges that we deduct
and other excess amounts in the Separate Account or we can transfer the excess
out of the Separate Account.

The Separate Account has subdivisions, called "investment divisions." Each
investment division invests its assets exclusively in shares of a corresponding
Portfolio of a Fund. We can add new investment divisions to or eliminate
investment divisions from the Separate Account. You can designate how you would
like your net premiums and cash value to be allocated among the available
investment divisions and our Fixed Account. Amounts you allocate to each
investment division receive the investment experience of the investment
division, and you bear this investment risk.

The Fixed Account

The Fixed Account is part of our general assets that are not in any legally-
segregated separate accounts. Amounts in the Fixed Account are credited with
interest at an effective annual rate of at least 4%. We may also credit excess
interest on such amounts. Different excess interest rates may apply to
different amounts based upon when such amounts were allocated to the Fixed
Account and whether they were premium payments or transfers from the investment
divisions. Any partial amounts we remove from the Fixed Account (such as any
portion of your Policy's monthly deduction that is allocable to the Fixed
Account) will be taken from the most recently allocated amount first.

Any excess interest rate will be credited for at least 12 months before a new
rate is credited. We can delay transfers, withdrawals, surrender and payment of
Policy loans from the Fixed Account for up to 6 months.

Since the Fixed Account is not registered under the federal securities laws,
this Prospectus contains only limited information about the Fixed Account. The
Policy gives you more information on the operation of the Fixed Account.

The Funds

Each of the Funds is a "series" type of mutual fund, which is registered as an
open-end management investment company under the 1940 Act. Each Fund is divided
into Portfolios, each of which represents a different class of stock in which a
corresponding investment division of the Separate Account invests. You should
read each Fund prospectus, which you have also received. They contain
information about each Fund and its Portfolios, including the investment
objectives, strategies, risks and investment advisers that are associated with
each Portfolio. They also contain information on our different separate
accounts and those of our affiliates that invest in each Fund and the risks
related thereto.

As of the end of each Valuation Period, we purchase and redeem Fund shares for
the Separate Account at their net asset value without any sales or redemption
charges. These purchases and redemptions reflect the amount of

                                       8
<PAGE>


[SIDEBAR: We will issue a Policy to you as owner. You will have all the rights
under the Policy, including the ability to name a new owner or contingent
owner.

any of the following transactions that take effect at the end of the Valuation
Period:

 . The allocation of net premiums to the Separate Account.

 . Dividends and distributions on Fund shares that are reinvested as of the
  dates paid (which reduces the value of each share of the Fund, increases the
  number of Fund shares outstanding, but has no affect on the cash value in the
  Separate Account).

 . Policy loans and loan repayments allocated to the Separate Account.

 . Transfers to and among investment divisions.

 . Withdrawals and surrenders taken from the Separate Account.

Issuing a Policy

If you want to own a Policy, then you must complete an application, which must
be received by the Designated Office. We reserve the right to reject an
application for any reason permitted by law, and our acceptance of an
application is subject to our underwriting rules.

Generally, we will issue a Policy only for insureds that are age 80 or less
(although we may decide to permit an insured that is older) that have provided
evidence of insurability that we find acceptable. An "insured" is the person
upon whose life we issue the Policy. You do not have to be the insured. For the
purpose of computing the insured's age under the Policy, we start with the
insured's age on the Date of Policy which is set forth in the Policy. Age under
the Policy at any other time is then computed using that issue age and adding
the number of full Policy years completed.

The Date of Policy is usually the date the Policy application is approved. We
use the Date of Policy to calculate the Policy years (and Policy months and
monthly anniversaries). We may permit a Date of Policy that is earlier than the
date the application is approved if there have been no material
misrepresentations in the application (but not earlier than the date that the
application is completed) in order to preserve a younger age for the insured.
Your Date of Policy can also be the date the application is completed if you
ask us and if we receive a payment of at least $2,500 with the application.

Temporary insurance will be provided for up to 90 days from the date of the
application, provided that we receive a payment equal to at least one "check-o-
matic" payment and any necessary medical examination has been completed. Even
if the insured hasn't completed the medical examination, there will be coverage
if the insured dies from an accident within 30 days of the date of the
application. The temporary insurance does not cover death by suicide. The
temporary insurance provided is equal to the specified face amount applied for
up to a maximum of $500,000. There will be no charge for the insurance
protection under the temporary insurance.

Insurance coverage under the Policy will begin at the time the Policy is
delivered and any temporary insurance that is then in force will end. For
coverage to be effective, the insured's health must be the same as stated in
the application and, in most states, the insured must not have sought medical
advice or treatment after the date of the application. As to when charges under
the Policy begin, see "Charges Included in the Monthly Deduction."

                                       9
<PAGE>


[SIDWBAR: The Policy generally offers a choice of three death benefit options.]


Policy Benefits

Insurance Proceeds

If the Policy is in force, we will pay your beneficiary the insurance proceeds
as of the end of the Valuation Period that includes the insured's date of
death. We will pay this amount after we receive documents that we request as
due proof of the insured's death. The beneficiary can receive the death benefit
in a single sum or under an income plan described below. You may make this
choice during the insured's lifetime. If no selection is made we will place the
amount in an account to which we will credit interest, and the beneficiary will
have immediate access to all or part of that amount. The beneficiary has one
year from the date the insurance proceeds are paid to change the selection from
a single sum payment to an income plan, as long as we have made no payments
from the interest-bearing account. If the terms of the income plan permit the
beneficiary to withdraw the entire amount from the plan, the beneficiary can
also name contingent beneficiaries.

The insurance proceeds equal:

 . The death benefit under the death benefit option or alternate death benefit
  that is then in effect; plus

 . Any additional insurance proceeds provided by rider; minus

 . Any unpaid Policy loans and accrued interest thereon, and any due and unpaid
  charges accruing during a grace period.

Death Benefit Options

Generally, you can choose among three options, although the choice may be
limited based upon availability in your state and the insured's age. You select
which option you want in the Policy application. The three options are:

 . Option A: The death benefit is a level amount and equals the specified face
  amount of the Policy.

 . Option B: The death benefit varies and equals the specified face amount of
  the Policy plus the cash value on the date of death.

 . Option C: The death benefit is designed to increase during your earning years
  (because we assume that your need for life insurance will probably increase
  during these years) and levels off thereafter. The death benefit is one of
  two amounts and is available only if insured is age 60 or less when we issue
  the Policy and the Policy was issued on or after May 1, 1994:

 . The death benefit varies and equals the specified face amount plus the cash
   value on the date of death, until the insured is age 65 ("CI").

 . At age 65, the death benefit becomes a level amount equal to the specified
   face amount under CI plus the cash value at the end of the Valuation Date
   immediately preceding the date on which the insured became age 65. This new
   amount then becomes the specified face amount ("CII").

There are issues that you should consider in choosing your death benefit
option. For example, under Options B and CI, the cash value is added to the
specified face amount. Therefore, the death benefit will generally be greater
under these options than under Options A and CII, for Policies with the same
specified face amount and premium payments. By the same token, the cost of
insurance will generally be greater under Options B and CI than under Options A
and CII.

                                       10
<PAGE>



You can change your death benefit option after the second Policy year, provided
that:

 . Your cash surrender value after the change would be enough to pay at least
  two monthly deductions.

 . The specified face amount continues to be no less than the minimum we allow
  after a decrease.

 . The total premiums you have paid do not exceed the then current maximum
  premium limitations permitted under Internal Revenue Service rules.

 . If the change is to C, the insured is age 60 or less.


             [SIDEBAR: You can generally change your death benefit option.]


Any change will be effective on the monthly anniversary on or immediately
following the Date of Receipt of the request. A change in death benefit will
have the following effects on your specified face amount:

 . Change from A or CII to B or CI: The specified face amount will decrease to
  equal the death benefit less the cash value on the effective date of the
  change.

 . Change from B or CI to A or CII: The specified face amount will increase to
  equal the death benefit plus the cash value of the Policy on the effective
  date of the change.

 . Change from B to CI or A to CII: The specified face amount will remain the
  same.

Before you change your death benefit option you should consider the following:

 . If the term insurance portion of your death benefit changes, as it may with a
  change from A or CII to B or CI and vice versa, the term insurance charge
  will also change. This will affect your cash value and, in some cases, the
  death benefit levels.

 . If your specified face amount changes because of the change in death benefit
  option, consider also the issues presented by changing your specified face
  amount that are described under "Specified Face Amount," below. These issues
  include the possibility: that your Policy would become a modified endowment
  contract; that you would receive a taxable distribution; of an increase or
  decrease in the monthly administration charge; and of changes in the maximum
  premium amounts that you can pay.

Alternate Death Benefit

In order to ensure that the Policy qualifies as life insurance under the
federal income tax laws, the beneficiary will receive an alternate death
benefit if it is greater than the amount that the beneficiary would have
received under the death benefit option that you chose. The alternate death
benefit is as follows:

<TABLE>
<S>                      <C>    <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>      <C>
Age of Insured at Death  40 and  45  50  55  60  65  70 75 to 90  95
                           less
% of Cash Value: *          250 215 185 150 130 120 115      105 100
</TABLE>
- --------
*For the ages not listed, the percentage decreases by a ratable portion for
each full year.


       [SIDEBAR: You can generally increase or decrease your Policy's specified
                                                           face amount.]

Specified Face Amount

The specified face amount is the basic amount of insurance specified in your
Policy. The Minimum Initial Specified Face amount is the smallest amount of
specified face amount for which a Policy may be issued. Currently these amounts
are generally:

 . $100,000 for insureds in the preferred rate class;

 . $50,000 for most other insureds; and

                                       11
<PAGE>



 . $250,000 for most Policies distributed through broker-dealers not affiliated
  with us.

Generally, you may change your specified face amount after the second Policy
year, as long as the insured is age 79 or under. Any change will be effective
on: the monthly anniversary on or next following (a) the Date of Receipt of
your request; or (b) if we require evidence of insurability, the date we
approve your request.

You are permitted to decrease the specified face amount to as low as $25,000
except that no reduction may decrease the specified face amount below the
Minimum Initial Specified Face Amount during the first five Policy years or one
half that amount thereafter. These lowest available specified face amount
requirements also apply to decreases that result from partial withdrawals or
changes in death benefit option. If there have been previous specified face
amount increases, any decreases in specified face amount will be made in the
following order: (i) the specified face amount provided by the most recent
increase; (ii) the next most recent increases successively; and (iii) the
initial specified face amount.

You may increase the specified face amount only if: the cash surrender value
after the change is large enough to cover at least two monthly deductions based
on your most recent cost of term insurance charge. Generally, the minimum
specified face amount increase is $5,000. Any increase will require that we
receive additional evidence of insurability that is satisfactory to us. We will
also impose an underwriting charge.

Before you change your specified face amount you should consider the following:

 . The term insurance portion of your death benefit will likely change and so
  will the term insurance charge. This will affect the insurance charges, cash
  value and, in some cases, death benefit levels.

 . Reducing your specified face amount in the first 15 Policy years may result
  in our returning an amount to you which could then be taxed on an income
  first basis.

 . We will establish an additional amount of surrender charge at the time of any
  increase in the specified face amount, other than an increase resulting
  automatically from a change of death benefit option.

 . The amount of additional premiums that the tax laws permit you to pay into
  your Policy may increase or decrease. The additional amount you can pay
  without causing your Policy to be a modified endowment contract for tax
  purposes may also increase or decrease.

 . In some circumstances, the Policy could become a modified endowment contract.

 . The monthly administration charge may change.

Cash Value

Your Policy's cash value equals:

 . The Fixed Account cash value, plus

 . The Policy Loan Account cash value, plus

 . The Separate Account cash value.


                                       12
<PAGE>

                   [SIDEBAR: Your Policy is designed to accumulate cash value.]

Your Policy's cash surrender value equals your cash value minus:

 . Any outstanding Policy loans (plus accrued interest);

 . Any surrender charges; and

 . A portion of the administration charge for any full Policy month remaining in
  the first Policy year.

The Separate Account cash value allocated to each investment division is
calculated as follows:

 . At the end of each Valuation Period the cash value in an investment division
  will equal:

 . The cash value in the investment division at the beginning of the Valuation
  Period; plus

 . All net premiums, loan repayments and cash value transfers into the
  investment division during the Valuation Period; minus

 . All partial cash withdrawals, loans and cash value transfers out of the
  investment division during the Valuation Period; minus

 . The portion of any charges and deductions allocated to the cash value in the
  investment division during the Valuation Period; plus

 . The net investment return for the Valuation Period on the amount of cash
  value in the investment division at the beginning of the Valuation Period.
  The net investment return currently equals the rate of increase or decrease
  in the net asset value per share of the underlying Fund portfolio over the
  Valuation Period, adjusted upward to take appropriate account of any
  dividends and other distributions paid by the portfolio during the period.
  The net investment return could in the future be reduced by a charge for
  taxes that we have the right to impose.

Benefit at Final Date

The Final Date is the Policy anniversary on which the insured is Age 95. If the
insured is living on the Final Date, we will pay you the cash value of the
Policy, reduced by any outstanding loans (plus accrued interest). You can
receive the cash value in a single sum, in an account that earns interest, or
under an available income plan.

Optional Benefits Added By Rider

You may be eligible for certain benefits provided by rider, subject to certain
underwriting requirements and the payment of additional premiums. We will
deduct any charges for the rider(s) as part of the monthly deduction. Each
rider contains important information, including limits and conditions that
apply to the benefits. If you decide to purchase any of the riders, you should
carefully review their provisions to be sure if the benefit is something that
you want. You should also consider:

 . That the addition of certain riders can restrict your ability to exercise
  certain rights under the Policy.

 . That the amount of benefits provided under the rider is not based on
  investment performance of a separate account; but, if the Policy terminates
  because of poor investment performance or any other reason, the riders
  generally will also terminate.

 . The tax consequences. You should also consult with your tax advisor before
  purchasing one of the riders.

                                       13
<PAGE>


[SIDEBAR: Generally, you can receive the Policy's insurance proceeds, amounts
payable at the Final Date or amounts paid upon surrender under an income plan
instead of in a lump sum.]

[SIDEBAR: You can transfer your cash value among the investment divisions and
the Fixed Account at any time.]

Generally, we currently make the following benefits available by rider:

<TABLE>
  <S>                                       <C>
  . Disability Waiver of Monthly Deduction  .Children's Term Insurance Benefit
    Benefit/1/
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  . Accidental Death Benefit                .Spouse Term Insurance Benefit
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            .Accelerated Death Benefit/2/
</TABLE>
- --------
/1/An increase in specified face amount may not be covered by this rider. If
not, the portion of the monthly deduction associated with the increase will
continue to be deducted from the cash value, which if insufficient, could
result in the Policy's termination. For this reason, it may be advantageous for
the owner, at the time of total disability, to reduce the specified face amount
to that covered by this rider.
/2/Payment under this rider may affect eligibility for benefits under state or
federal law.

Income Plans
Before you purchase an income plan you should consider:

 . The tax consequences associated with the Policy proceeds, which can vary
  considerably, depending on whether a plan is chosen. You or your beneficiary
  should consult with a qualified tax adviser about tax consequences.

 . That your Policy will terminate at the time you purchase an income plan and
  you will receive a new contract, which describes the terms of the income
  plan. You should carefully review the terms of the new contract, because it
  contains important information about the terms and conditions of the income
  plan.

 . That these plans do not have a variable investment return.

Generally, we currently make the following income plans available:

<TABLE>
  <S>                                <C>
  . Interest income                  .Installment Income for a Stated Period
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  . Installment Income for a Stated  . Single Life Income--Guaranteed
    Amount                             Payment Period
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  . Joint and Survivor Life Income   .Single Life Income--Guaranteed Return
</TABLE>

Policy Rights

Cash Value Transfers

The minimum amount you may transfer is $50 or, if less, the total amount in an
investment option. You may make transfers at any time. We do not currently
charge for transfers, but we do reserve the right to charge up to $25 per
transfer, except for transfers under the Automated Investment Strategies.
Currently, transfers are not taxable transactions.

Each Fund may restrict or refuse purchases or redemptions of shares in their
Portfolios as a result of certain market timing activities. You should read
each Fund's prospectus for more details.

We reserve the right to refuse to accept any transaction request where the
request would tend to disrupt administration of the Policies or is not in the
best interests of Policy owners or the Separate Account.

 . Automated Investment Strategies: You can choose one of four currently
  available strategies. You can also change or cancel your choice at any time.

                                       14
<PAGE>

[SIDEBAR: You can borrow from us and use your Policy as security for the loan.]

 . Equity Generator: allows you to transfer an amount equal to the interest
   earned in the Fixed Account in any Policy month equal to at least $20 to
   the MetLife Stock Index investment division or the State Street Research
   Aggressive Growth investment division. The transfer will be made at the
   beginning of the Policy month following the Policy month in which the
   interest was earned.

 . Equalizer: allows you to periodically equalize amounts in your Fixed
   Account and either the MetLife Stock Index investment division or the State
   Street Research Aggressive Growth investment division. We currently make
   equalization each quarter. We will terminate this strategy if you make a
   transfer out of the investment division or the Fixed Account that isn't
   part of the strategy. You may then reelect the Equalizer on your next
   Policy anniversary.

 . Rebalancer: allows you to periodically redistribute amounts in the Fixed
   Account and investment divisions in the same proportion that the net
   premiums are then being allocated. We currently make the redistribution
   each quarter.

 . Allocator: allows you to systematically transfer money from the State
   Street Research Money Market division to the Fixed Account and/or to any
   investment division(s). You must have enough cash value in the Fixed
   Account to enable the election to be in effect for three months. The
   election can be to transfer each month:

  . A specific amount until the cash value in the Fixed Account is exhausted,

  . A specific amount for a specific number of months, or

  . Amounts in equal installments until the total amount you have requested
    has been transferred.

 . Transfers by Telephone: We may, if permitted by state law, allow you to make
  transfer requests, changes to Automated Investment Strategies and allocations
  of future net premium by phone. We may also allow you to authorize your sales
  representative to make such requests. The following procedures apply:

 . We must have received your authorization in writing satisfactory to us, to
   act on instructions from any person that claims to be you or your sales
   representative, as applicable, as long as that person follows our
   procedures.

 . We will institute reasonable procedures to confirm that instructions we
   receive are genuine. Our procedures will include receiving from the caller
   your personalized data.

 . All telephone calls will be recorded.

 . You will receive a written confirmation of any transaction.

 . Neither the Separate Account nor we will be liable for any loss, expense or
   cost arising out of a telephone request if we reasonably believed the
   request to be genuine.

 . You should contact our Designated Office with any questions regarding the
   procedures.

Loan Privileges

The amount of each loan must be:

 . At least $250

 . No more than the cash surrender value less two monthly deductions, or, if
  greater, 75% of the cash surrender value (unless your Policy tells you that
  state law requires a different percentage to be applied) when added to all
  other outstanding Policy loans.

                                       15
<PAGE>

[SIDEBAR: You can surrender your Policy for its cash surrender value.]

As of your loan request's Date of Receipt, we will:

 . Remove an amount equal to the loan from your cash value in the Fixed Account
  and the cash value in the investment divisions of the Separate Account in the
  same proportion as your cash value is then allocated among these options.

 . Transfer such cash value to the Policy loan account, where it will be
  credited with interest at the rate of 8% per year less a percentage charge we
  base on expenses associated with Policy loans. This percentage charge is
  currently 2%, thus we currently credit interest in the Policy loan account at
  currently 6%. At no time will we credit less than 4%. At least once a year,
  we will transfer any interest earned in your Policy loan account to the Fixed
  Account and the investment divisions, according to the way that we then
  allocate net premiums.

 . Charge you interest, which will accrue daily at a rate of 8% per year. Your
  interest payments are due at the end of each Policy year and if you don't pay
  the amount within 31 days after it is due, we will treat it as a new Policy
  loan.

Repaying your loans (plus accrued interest) is done by sending in payments at
least equal to your voluntary planned periodic premium, or $50, if less. You
should designate whether a payment is intended to be a loan repayment. If you
do not so designate, we will treat the payment as a premium payment. We will
allocate your repayment to the Fixed Account and the investment divisions, in
the same proportion that net premiums are then allocated.

Before taking a Policy loan you should consider the following:

 . Interest payments on loans are generally not deductible for tax purposes.

 . Under certain situations, Policy loans could be considered taxable
  distributions.

 . If you surrender your Policy or if we terminate your Policy, or at the Final
  Date, any outstanding loan amounts (plus accrued interest) will be taxed as a
  distribution. (See "Federal Tax Matters--The Policy--Loans" below.)

 . A policy loan increases the chances of our terminating your policy due to
  insufficient cash value. We will terminate your Policy with no value if: (a)
  on a monthly anniversary your loans (plus accrued interest) exceed your cash
  value minus the monthly deduction; and (b) we tell you of the insufficiency
  and you do not make a sufficient payment within 61 days of the monthly
  anniversary.

 . Your Policy's death benefit will be reduced by any unpaid loan (plus accrued
  interest).

Surrender and Withdrawal Privileges

We may ask you to return the Policy before we honor your request to surrender
your Policy. You can choose to have the proceeds paid in a single sum, or under
an income plan. If the insured dies after you surrender the Policy but before
the end of the Policy month in which you surrendered the Policy, we will pay
your beneficiary an amount equal to the difference between the Policy's death
benefit and its cash value, computed as of the surrender date.

You can make partial withdrawals at any time without charge if:

 . The withdrawal would not result in a reduction in your specified face amount
  during the first 2 Policy years, as described under "Specified Face Amount"
  above.

 . The withdrawal would not result in the cash surrender value being less than
  sufficient to pay 2 monthly deductions.

                                       16
<PAGE>


 . The withdrawal is at least $250.

 . The withdrawal would not result in your specified face amount falling below
  the minimum allowable amount, as described under "Specified Face Amount,"
  above.

 . The withdrawal would not result in total premiums paid exceeding the then
  current maximum premium limitation determined by Internal Revenue Code rules.

If you make a request for a partial withdrawal that is not permitted, we will
tell you and you may then ask for a smaller withdrawal or surrender the Policy.
We will deduct your withdrawal from the Fixed Account and the investment
divisions in the same proportion as your cash value is then allocated among
these options.

Before surrendering your Policy or requesting a partial withdrawal you should
consider the following:

 . Surrender charges may apply to a full surrender.

 . Amounts received may be taxable as income and, if your Policy is a modified
  endowment contract, subject to certain tax penalties.

 . Your Policy could become a modified endowment contract.

 . For partial withdrawals, your death benefit will decrease by the amount of
  the withdrawal (for options A and CI, your specified face amount will also
  decrease, generally by the amount of the withdrawal).

 . Any withdrawal that causes the specified face amount to decrease could cause
  an increase in the monthly administrative charge.

 . In some cases you may be better off taking a Policy loan, rather than a
  partial withdrawal.

Exchange Privilege

If you decide that you no longer want to take advantage of the investment
divisions in the Separate Account, you may transfer all of your money into the
Fixed Account. There is currently no charge on transfers. Even if we do have a
transfer charge in the future, such charge will never be imposed on a transfer
of your entire cash value (or the cash value attributable to a specified face
amount increase) to the Fixed Account within the first 24 Policy months (or
within 24 Policy months after a specified face amount increase you have
requested, as applicable). In some states, in order to exercise your exchange
privilege, you must transfer, without charge, the Policy cash value (or the
portion attributable to a specified face amount increase) to a flexible premium
fixed benefit life insurance policy, which we make available.

Third Party Requests

Generally, we only accept requests for transactions or information from you.
Therefore, we reserve the right not to process transactions requested on your
behalf by your agent with a power of attorney or any other authorization. This
includes processing transactions by an agent you designate, through a power of
attorney or other authorization, who has the ability to control the amount and
timing of transfers for a number of other Policy owners, and who simultaneously
makes the same request or series of requests on behalf of other Policy owners.

                                       17
<PAGE>


[SIDEBAR: You can make voluntary planned periodic premium payments and
unscheduled premium payments.]


[SIDEBAR: Net premiums are your premiums minus the charges deducted from your
premiums.]

Payment and Allocation of Premiums

Premiums

The payment of premiums won't guarantee that your Policy will remain in force.
Rather, this depends on your Policy's cash surrender value.

Paying Premiums

You can make premium payments, subject to certain limitations discussed below,
through the:

 . Voluntary planned periodic premium schedule: You choose the schedule on your
  application. The schedule sets forth the amount of premiums, fixed payment
  intervals, and the period of time that you intend to pay premiums. The
  schedule can be: (a) annual; (b) semi-annual; (c) periodic automatic pre-
  authorized transfers from your checking account ( "check-o-matic"); (d)
  systematic through payment plans that your employer makes available; or (e)
  through another method to which we agree. You do not have to pay premiums in
  accordance with your voluntary planned period premium schedule.

 . Unscheduled premium payment option: You can make premium payments at any
  time.

Maximum and Minimum Premium Payments

 . During the first two Policy years you must pay an amount of premium that we
  call the minimum allowable planned premium.

 . After the first two Policy years, your voluntary planned periodic payments
  must be at least:

 . $200 annually (except that some Policies distributed by certain brokers
   must be at least $2,500)

 . $100 semi-annually

 . $15 on a "check-o-matic" or other systematic payment schedule.

 . Unscheduled premium payments must be at least $250 each.

 . You may not pay premiums that exceed tax law premium limitations for life
  insurance policies. We will return any amounts that exceed these limits
  except that we will keep any amounts that are required to keep the Policy
  from terminating. We will let you make premium payments that would turn your
  Policy into a modified endowment contract, but we will tell you of this
  status in your annual statement, and if possible, we will tell you how to
  reverse the status.

Allocating Net Premiums

We will allocate your net premiums according to your net premium allocation
instructions in your application. You can instruct us to allocate your net
premiums among the Fixed Account and the investment divisions. The percentage
of your net premium allocation into each of these investment options must be a
minimum of 1% and in whole numbers. You can change your allocations at any time
by giving us written notification at our Designated Office or in another manner
that we permit.

                                       18
<PAGE>


          [SIDEBAR: Carefully review the "Table of Charges and Expenses" in the
  "Summary", which sets forth the charges that you pay under your Policy.]

Policy Termination and Reinstatement

Termination: We will terminate your Policy without any cash surrender value if:

During the first two Policy years, the total premiums paid as of such monthly
anniversary are not equal to the minimum premiums required as of that date and
(a) and (b) below occur.

(a) The cash surrender value is less than the monthly deduction; and

(b) We do not receive a sufficient premium payment within the 61-day grace
  period to cover the difference between the total premiums previously paid and
  the minimum required premiums.

After the first two Policy years:

(a) The cash surrender value is less than the monthly deduction; and

(b) We do not receive a sufficient premium payment within the 61-day grace
  period to cover two monthly deductions. We will mail you notice if any grace
  period starts.

Reinstatement: Upon your request, we will reinstate your Policy (without
reinstating any amounts in a Policy loan account), subject to certain terms and
conditions that the Policy provides. We must receive your request within 3
years (or within a longer period if required by state law) after the end of the
grace period and before the Final Date. You also must provide us:

 . A written application for reinstatement (the date we approve the application
  will be the effective date of the reinstatement).

 . Evidence of insurability that we find satisfactory.

 . An additional premium amount that the Policy prescribes for this purpose.

Charges and Deductions

The Policy charges compensate us for our expenses and risks. Any distinctions
we make about the specific purposes of the different charges are imprecise, and
we are free to keep and use our revenues or profits for any other purpose,
including paying any of our costs and expenses in connection with the Policies.
The following sets forth additional information about some (but not all) of the
Policy charges.

Charge for average expected state taxes attributable to premiums: We make this
charge to reimburse us for the state premium taxes that we must pay on premiums
we receive. Premium taxes vary from state to state and currently range from 0
to 3.5%. Our charge approximates the average tax rate we expect to pay on
premiums we receive from all states.

Charges included in the Monthly Deduction: The monthly deduction is taken from
the Fixed Account and each investment division in which you have cash value in
the same proportion as your cash value is allocated among these options at the
beginning of the policy month. We deduct the monthly deductions as of each
monthly anniversary beginning as of the Date of Policy.

 . Cost of term insurance: This charge varies monthly based on many factors.
  Each month, we determine the charge by multiplying your cost of insurance
  rates by the term insurance amount.


                                       19
<PAGE>

 . The term insurance amount is the death benefit at the beginning of the
   Policy month divided by a discount factor to account for an assumed return;
   minus the cash value at the beginning of the Policy month after deduction
   of all other applicable charges. Factors that affect the term insurance
   amount include the specified face amount, the cash value and the death
   benefit you choose (generally, the term insurance amount will be higher for
   options B and CI).

 . The term insurance rate is based on our expectations as to future
   experience, taking into account the insured's sex (if permitted by law),
   age and rate class. The rates will never exceed the guaranteed rates, which
   are based on certain 1980 Commissioners Standard Ordinary Mortality Tables
   and the insured's sex, age and smoking status. Our current rates are lower
   than the maximums in most cases. We review our rates periodically and may
   adjust them, but we will apply the same rates to everyone who has had their
   Policy for the same amount of time and who is the same age, sex and rate
   class. As a general rule, the cost of insurance rate increases each year
   you own your Policy, as the insured's age increases.

  . Rate class relates to the level of mortality risk we assume with respect
    to an insured. It can be the standard rate class, or one that is higher
    or lower (and if the insured is 18 or older, we divide rate class by
    smoking status). The insured's rate class will affect your cost of term
    insurance. You can also have more than one rate class in effect, if the
    insured's rate class has changed and you change your specified face
    amount. A better rate class will lower the cost of term insurance on your
    entire Policy and a worse rate class will affect the portion of your cost
    of term insurance charge attributable to the specified face amount
    increase.

 . Administration charge: We make this monthly charge primarily to compensate
   us for expenses we incur in the administration of the Policy, and also, in
   the first year, our underwriting and start-up expenses.

 . Mortality and expense risk charge: We make this monthly charge primarily to
   compensate us for:

  . mortality risks that insureds may live for a shorter period than we
    expect; and

  . expense risks that our issuing and administrative expenses may be higher
    than we expect.

If our estimates are correct, we will realize a profit from this charge,
otherwise, we could incur a loss.

Surrender charge

The surrender charges per thousand dollars of initial specified face amount (or
per thousand dollars of a specified face amount increase you request) are as
follows:

                                       20
<PAGE>

  [SIDEBAR: Surrender charges may apply when you surrender your Policy or if we
                                                        terminate your Policy.]

 Death Benefit
 Option A:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                        Policy Years Since Issue or Increase
     -------------------------------------------------------------------
  Age at
  issue or
  increase    1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <S>        <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
    0-5      $ 3 $ 3 $ 3 $ 3 $ 3 $ 2 $ 2 $ 2 $ 2 $ 2 $ 1 $ 1 $ 1 $ 1 $ 1
    6-10       3   3   3   3   3   2   2   2   2   2   1   1   1   1   1
   11-20       3   3   3   3   3   2   2   2   2   2   1   1   1   1   1
   21-25       3   3   3   3   3   2   2   2   2   2   1   1   1   1   1
   26-30       4   4   3   3   3   3   3   2   2   2   2   1   1   1   1
   31-35       7   6   6   6   5   5   5   4   4   3   3   2   2   1   1
   36-40       8   7   7   7   6   6   5   5   4   4   3   3   2   1   1
   41-44      10   9   8   8   7   7   6   6   5   4   4   3   2   2   1
   45-50      12  12  11  10  10   9   8   7   7   6   5   4   3   2   1
   51-54      15  15  14  13  12  11  10   9   8   7   6   5   4   3   1
   55-59      18  17  16  15  14  13  12  11  10   9   8   6   5   3   2
   60-69      22  21  20  18  17  16  15  13  12  11   9   7   6   4   2
   70-79      22  21  20  18  17  16  15  13  12  11   9   8   6   4   2
   80         22  21  20  18  17  16  15  14  13  12  10   9   8   6   3
</TABLE>

 Death Benefit
 Option B:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                        Policy Years Since Issue or Increase
     -------------------------------------------------------------------
  Age at
  issue or
  increase    1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <S>        <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
    0-5      $ 4 $ 4 $ 3 $ 3 $ 3 $ 3 $ 3 $ 2 $ 2 $ 2 $ 2 $ 1 $ 1 $ 1 $ 1
    6-10       4   4   4   4   3   3   3   3   2   2   2   1   1   1   1
   11-20       5   5   5   4   4   4   3   3   3   2   2   2   1   1   1
   21-25       7   7   6   6   6   5   5   4   4   3   3   2   2   1   1
   26-30      10   8   7   7   7   6   6   5   4   4   3   3   2   1   1
   31-35      12  12  11  10  10   9   8   7   6   5   4   4   3   2   1
   36-40      15  14  13  12  12  11  10   9   8   7   6   5   4   3   1
   41-44      20  20  19  18  17  16  14  13  12  10   9   7   5   4   2
   45-50      24  24  24  22  21  19  17  16  14  12  10   8   6   4   2
   51-54      27  27  26  24  23  21  19  18  16  14  12  10   7   5   3
   55-59      30  29  27  25  24  22  20  18  16  14  12  10   8   5   3
   60-69      32  30  29  27  25  23  22  20  18  15  13  11   8   6   3
   70-79      36  34  33  31  29  27  25  23  20  18  16  13  10   7   4
   80         40  38  36  34  32  30  28  26  24  22  19  17  14  11   6
</TABLE>

 Death Benefit
 Option C:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                        Policy Years Since Issue or Increase
     -------------------------------------------------------------------
  Age at
  issue or
  increase    1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <S>        <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
    0-5      $ 4 $ 4 $ 3 $ 3 $ 3 $ 3 $ 3 $ 2 $ 2 $ 2 $ 2 $ 1 $ 1 $ 1 $ 1
    6-10       4   4   4   4   3   3   3   3   2   2   2   1   1   1   1
   11-20       4   4   4   4   4   3   3   3   3   2   2   2   1   1   1
   21-25       5   5   5   5   5   4   4   3   3   3   2   2   2   1   1
   26-30       7   6   5   5   5   5   5   4   3   3   3   2   2   1   1
   31-35      10   9   9   8   8   7   7   6   5   4   4   3   3   2   1
   36-40      12  11  10  10   9   9   8   7   6   6   5   4   3   2   1
   41-44      15  15  14  13  12  12  10  10   9   7   7   5   4   3   2
   45-50      18  18  18  16  16  14  13  12  11   9   8   6   5   3   2
   51-54      21  21  20  19  18  16  15  14  12  11   9   8   6   4   2
   55-59      24  23  22  20  19  18  16  15  13  12  10   8   7   4   3
   60-64      27  26  25  23  21  20  19  17  15  13  11   9   7   5   3
   65-69      22  22  20  18  17  16  15  13  12  11   9   7   6   4   2
   70-79      22  21  20  18  17  16  15  13  12  11   9   8   6   4   2
   80         22  21  20  18  17  16  15  14  13  12  10   9   8   6   3
</TABLE>

                                       21
<PAGE>



[SIDEBAR: You should consult with your own tax advisor to find out how taxes
can affect your benefits and rights under your Policy.]

Federal Tax Matters

The following is a brief summary of some tax rules that may apply to your
Policy. You should consult with your own tax advisor to find out how taxes can
affect your benefits and rights under your Policy, especially before you make
unscheduled premium payments, change your specified face amount, change your
death benefit option, change coverage provided by riders, take a loan or
withdrawal, or assign or surrender the Policy.

The Policy

Insurance proceeds

 . Generally excludable from your beneficiary's gross income.

 . The proceeds may be subject to federal estate tax: (i) if paid to the
  insured's estate; or (ii) if paid to a different beneficiary if the insured
  possessed incidents of ownership at or within three years before death.

 . If you die before the insured, the value of your Policy (determined under IRS
  rules) is included in your estate and may be subject to federal estate tax.

 . Whether or not any federal estate tax is due is based on a number of factors
  including the estate size.

Cash value (if your Policy is not a modified endowment contract)

 . You are generally not taxed on your cash value until you withdraw it,
  surrender your Policy or receive a distribution on the Final Date. In these
  cases, you are generally permitted to take withdrawals up to the amount of
  premiums paid without any tax consequences. However, withdrawals will be
  subject to income tax after you have received amounts equal to the total
  premiums you paid. Somewhat different rules apply in the first 15 Policy
  years, when a distribution may be subject to tax if there is a gain in your
  Policy (which is generally when your cash value exceeds the cumulative
  premiums you paid). Finally, if your Policy is part of a collateral
  assignment equity split dollar arrangement, there is a risk that increases in
  cash value may be taxed annually.

Loans

 . Loan amounts received will generally not be subject to income tax, unless
  your Policy is or becomes a modified endowment contract or terminates.

 . Interest on loans is generally not deductible. For businesses that own a
  Policy, at least part of the interest deduction unrelated to the Policy may
  be disallowed unless the insured is a 20% owner, officer, director or
  employee of the business.

 . If your Policy terminates (upon surrender, cancellation, lapse or the Final
  Date) while any Policy loan is outstanding, the amount of the loan plus
  accrued interest thereon will be deemed to be a "distribution" to you. Any
  such distribution will have the same tax consequences as any other Policy
  distribution.

Modified Endowment Contracts

These contracts are life insurance contracts where the premiums paid during the
first 7 years after the Policy is issued, or after a material change in the
Policy, exceeds tax law limits referred to as the "7-pay test." Material

                                       22
<PAGE>

changes in the Policy, include changes in the level of benefits and certain
other changes to your Policy after the issue date. Reductions in benefits
during a 7-pay period may cause your Policy to become a modified endowment
contract. Generally, a life insurance policy that is received in exchange for a
modified endowment contract will also be considered a modified endowment
contract.

If your Policy is considered a modified endowment contract the following
applies:

 . The death benefit will generally be income tax free to your beneficiary, as
  discussed above.

 . Amounts withdrawn or distributed before the insured's death, including loans,
  assignments and pledges, are (to the extent of any gains in your policy)
  treated as income first and subject to income tax. All modified endowment
  contracts you purchase from us and our affiliates during the same calendar
  year are treated as a single contract for purposes of determining the amount
  of any such income.

 . An additional 10% income tax generally applies to the taxable portion of the
  amounts received before age 59 1/2, except generally if you are disabled or
  the distribution is part of a series of substantially equal periodic
  payments.

Diversification

In order for your Policy to qualify as life insurance, we must comply with
certain diversification standards with respect to the investments underlying
the Policy. We believe that we satisfy and will continue to satisfy these
diversification standards. Inadvertent failure to meet these standards may be
able to be corrected. Failure to meet these standards would result in immediate
taxation to Policy owners of gains under their Policies.

Changes to tax rules and interpretations

Changes in applicable tax rules and interpretations can adversely affect the
tax treatment of your Policy. These changes may take effect retroactively. We
reserve the right to amend the Policy in any way necessary to avoid any adverse
tax treatment. Examples of changes that could create adverse tax consequences
include:

 . Possible taxation of cash value transfers.

 . Possible taxation as if you were the owner of your allocable portion of the
  Separate Account's assets.

 . Possible limits on the number of investment funds available or the frequency
  of transfers among them.

 . Possible changes in the tax treatment of Policy benefits and rights.

Our taxation

In general, we don't expect to incur federal, state or local taxes upon the
earnings or realize capital gains attributable to the assets in the Separate
Account relating to the Policies' cash surrender value. If we do incur such
taxes, we reserve the right to charge the cash value allocated to the Separate
Account for these taxes.

Showing Performance

We may advertise or otherwise show:

 . Investment division performance ranking and rating information as it compares
  among similar investments as compiled by independent organizations.


                                       23
<PAGE>

[SIDEBAR: Carefully review your Policy which contains a full discussion of all
its provisions.]

 . Comparisons of the investment divisions with performance of similar
  investments and appropriate indices.

 . Our insurance company ratings that are assigned by independent rating
  agencies and that are relevant when considering our ability to honor our
  guarantees.

 . Personalized illustrations based on historical Separate Account performance.

Rights We Reserve

We reserve the right to make certain changes if we believe the changes are in
the best interest of our Policy owners or would help carry out the purposes of
the Policy. We will make these changes in the manner permitted by applicable
law and only after getting any necessary owner and regulatory approval. We will
notify you of any changes that result in a material change in the underlying
investments in the investment divisions, and you will have a chance to transfer
out of the affected division (without charge). Some of the changes we may make
include:

 . Operating the Separate Account in any other form that is permitted by
  applicable law.

 . Changes to obtain or continue exemptions from the 1940 Act.

 . Transferring assets among investment divisions or to other separate accounts,
  or our general account or combining or removing investment divisions from the
  Separate Account.

 . Substituting Fund shares in an investment division for shares of another
  portfolio of a Fund or another fund or investment permitted by law.

 . Changing the way we assess charges without exceeding the aggregate amount of
  the Policy's guaranteed maximum charges.

 . Making any necessary technical changes to the Policy to conform it to the
  changes we have made.

Other Policy Provisions

You should read your Policy for a full discussion of its provisions. The
following is a brief discussion of some of the provisions that you should
consider:

Free Look Period

You can return the Policy during this period. The period is the later of:

 . 10 days after you receive the Policy (unless state law requires your Policy
  to specify a longer specified period); and

 . 45 days after we receive Part A of the completed application.

If you return your Policy, we will send you a complete refund of any premiums
paid (or cash value plus any charges deducted if state law requires) within
seven days. You have a smiliar free look period with respect to any specified
face amount increase you request. If you exercise this right, we will restore
your policy values to what they would have been if you had never requested the
increase.

Incontestability

We will not contest:

 . Your Policy after 2 Policy years from issue or reinstatement (excluding
  riders added later).

                                       24
<PAGE>

                    [SIDEBAR: Under certain situations, we may defer payments.]

  [SIDEBAR: We perform the sales and administrative services for the Policies.]

 . An increase in a death benefit after it has been in effect for two years.

Suicide

If the insured commits suicide within the first two Policy years (or another
period required by state law), your beneficiary will receive all premiums paid
(without interest), less any outstanding loans (plus accrued interest) and
withdrawals taken. Similarly, we will pay the beneficiary only the cost of any
increase in specified face amount if the insured commits suicide within two
years of such increase.

Age and Sex

We will adjust benefits to reflect the correct age and sex of the insured, if
this information isn't correct in the Policy application.

Assignment and Change of Ownership

You can assign your Policy as collateral if you notify us in writing. The
assignment or release of the assignment is effective when it is recorded at the
Designated Office. We are not responsible for determining the validity of the
assignment or its release. Also, there could be serious adverse tax
consequences to you or your beneficiary, so you should consult with your tax
adviser before making any change of ownership or other assignment.

Payment and Deferment

Generally, we will pay or transfer amounts from the Separate Account within
seven days after the Date of Receipt of all necessary documentation required
for such payment or transfer. We can defer this if:

 . The New York Stock Exchange has an unscheduled closing.

 . There is an emergency so that we could not reasonably determine the
  investment experience of a Policy.

 . The Securities and Exchange Commission by order permits us do so for the
  protection of Policy owners (provided that the delay is permitted under New
  York State insurance law and regulations).

 . With respect to the insurance proceeds, if entitlement to a payment is being
  questioned or is uncertain.

 . We are paying amounts attributable to a check. In that case we can wait for a
  reasonable time (15 days or less) to let the check clear.

We currently pay interest on the amount of insurance proceeds at 6% per year
(or higher if state law requires) from the date of death until the date we pay
the benefit.

Dividends

The Policy is "nonparticipating," which means it is not eligible for dividends
from us and does not share in any distributions of our surplus.

Sales and Administration of the Policies

We serve as the "principal underwriter," as defined in the 1940 Act, for the
Policy and other variable life insurance and variable annuity contracts issued
by our subsidiary and us. We are registered under the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 as a broker-dealer and are a member of the National Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc. We are an investment manager to the Fund and may also
provide advisory services to other clients.

                                       25
<PAGE>


[SIDEBAR: You can give us voting instructions on shares of each Portfolio of a
Fund that are attributed to your Policy.]

Bonding

Our directors, officers and employees are bonded in the amount of $50,000,000,
subject to a $5,000,000 deductible.

Distributing the Policies

We sell the Policies through licensed life insurance sales representatives:

 . Registered through us.

 . Registered through other broker-dealers, including a wholly owned subsidiary.

Commissions

We pay commissions to representatives (or the broker-dealers through which they
are registered) for the sale of our products. The commissions do not result in
a charge against the Policy in addition to the charges already described
elsewhere in this Prospectus. Commissions paid in 1997, 1998 and 1999 totaled
$21,001,907, $18,428,323, and $19,290,501, respectively. Maximum commissions
are:

 . First Policy Year:

 . The lesser of 60% of the Option A target premium; plus

 . 3% of the excess of the premium paid over the Option A target premium; or


 . $40 per $1000 of face amount of insurance issued.

 . Policy Years 2-4: 5% of premiums paid in the Policy year.

 . Policy Years 5-10: A servicing fee of 2% of premiums paid in the Policy year.

 . Policy Years 11 and later: A servicing fee of 1% of premiums paid in the
  Policy year.

We also pay the sales manager of a sales representative employed by us an
override commission based on many factors including the commissions paid to the
representative who sold the Policy and to other representatives the sales
manager supervises.

We may require all or part of the commissions to be returned to us if you do
not continue your Policy for at least 2 years.

Voting Rights

The Funds have shareholder meetings from time to time to, for example, elect
directors and approve investment managers. We will vote the shares of each
Portfolio that are attributed to your Policy based on your instructions. Should
we determine that the 1940 Act no longer requires us to do this, we may decide
to vote Fund shares in our own right, without input from you or any other
owners of variable life insurance policies or variable annuity contracts that
participate in a Fund.

If you are eligible to give us voting instructions, we will send you
informational material and a form to send back to us. We are entitled to
disregard voting instructions in certain limited circumstances prescribed by
the SEC. If we do so, we will give you our reasons in the next semi-annual
report to Policy owners.

                                       26
<PAGE>


The number of shares for which you can give us voting instructions is
determined as of the record date for the Fund shareholder meeting by dividing:

 . Your Policy's cash value in the corresponding investment division; by

 . The net asset value of one share of that Portfolio.

We will count fractional votes.

If we do not receive timely voting instructions from Policy owners and other
insurance and annuity owners that are entitled to give us voting instructions,
we will vote those shares in the same proportion as the shares held in the same
separate account for which we did receive voting instructions. Also, we will
vote Fund shares that are not attributable to insurance or annuity owners
(including shares that we hold in our general account) or that are held in
separate accounts that are not registered under the 1940 Act in the same
proportion as the aggregate of the shares for which we received voting
instructions from all insurance and annuity owners.

Reports

Generally, you will promptly receive statements confirming your significant
transactions such as:

 . Change in specified face amount.

 . Change in death benefit options.

 . Transfers among investment divisions (including those through Automated
  Investment Strategies, which are confirmed quarterly).

 . Partial withdrawals.

 . Loan amounts you request.

 . Loan repayments and premium payments.

If your premium payments are made through check-o-matic or another systematic
payment method, we will not send you any confirmation in addition to the one
you receive from your bank or employer.

We will also send you an annual statement within 30 days after a Policy year
that will summarize the year's transactions and include information on:

 . Deductions and charges.

 . Status of the death benefit.

 . Cash and cash surrender values.

 . Amounts in the investment divisions and Fixed Account.

 . Status of Policy loans.

 . Automatic loans to pay interest.

 . Information on your modified endowment contract status (if applicable).

We will also send you a Fund's annual and semi-annual reports to shareholders.

                                       27
<PAGE>

[SIDEBAR: Personalized illustrations can help you understand how your Policy
values can vary.]

Illustration of Policy Benefits

In order to help you understand how your Policy values would vary over time
under different sets of assumptions, we will provide you with certain
illustrations upon request. These will be based on the age and insurance risk
characteristics of the insured under your Policy and such factors as the
specified face amount, death benefit option, premium payment amounts and rates
of return (within limits) that you request. You can request such illustrations
at any time. We have filed an example of such an illustration as an exhibit to
the registration statement referred to below.

Getting More Information

We are regulated by the New York Insurance Department and periodically are
examined by them. We are also subject to the laws and regulations of all the
jurisdictions in which we do business and, if required, we have filed the
Policy for approval in every jurisdiction in which the Policy is sold. The
Policy and /or the guaranteed minimum death benefit may not be available in
every jurisdiction. You should ask your sales representative whether the Policy
is available in your jurisdiction.

We file annual statements on our operations, including financial statements,
with insurance departments of various jurisdictions so that they can review our
solvency and compliance with applicable laws and regulations. You can review
these statements which are available at the offices of the various insurance
departments.

This Prospectus is part of a registration statement that we filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Act of 1933. The
registration statement includes additional information, amendments and
exhibits. You can get this information from the Securities and Exchange
Commission (a copying fee may apply) by visiting or writing to its Public
Reference Room or using its Internet site at:

 . Securities and Exchange Commission
 Public Reference Room
 Washington, D.C. 20549
 Call 1-800-SEC-0330 (for information about using the Public Reference Room)
 Internet site: http://www.sec.gov

Legal, Accounting and Actuarial Matters

Christopher P. Nicholas, Associate General Counsel at MetLife, has passed upon
the legality of the Policies. Messrs. Freedman, Levy Kroll &Simonds,
Washington, D.C., have advised us on certain matters relating to the federal
securities laws.

Deloitte & Touche LLP, independent auditors, audited the financial statements
included in this Prospectus, as stated in their reports appearing herein. The
financial statements are included in reliance upon the reports of such firm
given upon their authority as experts in accounting and auditing. Our financial
statements should be considered only as bearing upon our ability to meet our
obligations under the Policy.

Marian Zeldin, FSA, MAAA, Vice-President and Actuary of MetLife, has examined
actuarial matters included in the registration statement, as stated in her
opinion filed as an exhibit to the registration statement.

                                       28
<PAGE>

Management

The present directors and the senior officers and secretary of MetLife are
listed below, together with certain information concerning them:

Directors, Officers-Directors


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                       Principal Occupation &                       Positions and Offices
  Name                 Business Address                                 with MetLife
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <S>                  <C>                                  <C>
  Curtis H. Barnette   Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Director
                       Bethlehem Steel Corp.
                       1170 Eight Ave. -- Martin Tower 2118
                       Bethlehem, PA 18016
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Robert H. Benmosche  Chairman of the Board, President and Chairman of the Board, President,
                       Chief Executive Officer              Chief Executive Officer and Director
                       Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                       One Madison Ave.
                       New York, NY 10010
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Gerald Clark         Vice Chairman of the Board and       Vice Chairman of the Board,
                       Chief Investment Officer             Chief Investment Officer and Director
                       Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                       One Madison Ave.
                       New York, NY 10010
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Joan Ganz Cooney     Chairman, Executive Committee        Director
                       Children's Television Workshop
                       One Lincoln Plaza
                       New York, NY 10023
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Burton A. Dole, Jr.  Retired Chairman, President and      Director
                       Chief Executive Officer
                       Nellcor Puritan Bennett
                       2200 Faraday Avenue
                       Carlsbad, CA 92008
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  James R. Houghton    Chairman of the Board Emeritus       Director
                       and Director
                       Corning Incorporated
                       80 East Market Street, 2nd Floor
                       Corning, NY 14830
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Harry P. Kamen       Retired Chairman and                 Director
                       Chief Executive Officer
                       Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                       One Madison Ave.
                       New York, NY 10010
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Helene L. Kaplan     Of Counsel                           Director
                       Skadden Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
                       919 Third Ave.
                       New York, NY 10022
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Charles M. Leighton  Retired Chairman and                 Director
                       Chief Executive Officer
                       CML Group, Inc.
                       524 Main Street
                       Bolton, MA 01720
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Allen E. Murray      Retired Chairman of the Board and    Director
                       Chief Executive Officer
                       Mobil Corporation
                       375 Park Ave., Suite 2901
                       New York, NY 10152
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Stewart Nagler       Vice Chairman of the Board and       Vice Chairman of the Board and
                       Chief Financial Officer              Chief Financial Officer and Director
                       Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                       One Madison Avenue
                       New York, NY 10010
</TABLE>

                                       29
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          Principal Occupation &                Positions and Offices
  Name                    Business Address                          with MetLife
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <S>                     <C>                                   <C>
  John J. Phelan, Jr.     Retired Chairman and                  Director
                          Chief Executive Officer
                          New York Stock Exchange, Inc.
                          P.O. Box 312
                          Mill Neck, NY 11765
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Hugh B. Price           President and Chief Executive Officer Director
                          National Urban League, Inc.
                          12 Wall Street
                          New York, NY 10005
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Robert G. Schwartz      Retired Chairman of the Board,        Director
                          President and Chief Executive Officer
                          Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
                          200 Park Ave., Suite 5700
                          New York, NY 10166
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Ruth J. Simmons, Ph.D.  President                             Director
                          Smith College
                          College Hall 20
                          Northhampton, MA 01063
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  William C. Steere, Jr.  Chairman of the Board and             Director
                          Chief Executive Officer
                          Pfizer, Inc.
                          235 East 42nd Street
                          New York, NY 10017
</TABLE>

                                       30
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
  Name of Officer*     Position with Metropolitan Life
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  <S>                  <C>
  Robert H. Benmosche  Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Gerald Clark         Vice Chairman of the Board, Chief Investment Officer and Director
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Stewart G. Nagler    Vice Chairman of the Board, Chief Financial Officer and Director
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Gary A. Beller       Senior Executive Vice-President and General Counsel
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  James H. Benson      President, Individual Business; Chairman, Chief Executive
                       Officer and President, New England Life Insurance Company
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  C. Robert Henrikson  President, Institutional Business
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  William J. Toppeta   President, Client Services and Chief Administrative Officer
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Richard A. Liddy     Senior Executive Vice-President
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Catherine A. Rein    Senior Executive Vice-President; President and Chief Executive
                       Officer, Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  John H. Tweedie      Senior Executive Vice-President
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Lisa M. Weber        Executive Vice-President
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Judy E. Weiss        Executive Vice-President and Chief Actuary
</TABLE>
- ------------

* The principal occupation of each officer, except for the following officers,
  during the last five years has been as an officer of Metropolitan Life or an
  affiliate thereof. Robert H. Benmosche has been an officer of Metropolitan
  Life since September, 1995; prior thereto, he was an Executive Vice-
  President of Paine Webber. Lisa Weber has been an officer of Metropolitan
  Life since March 16, 1998; prior thereto, she was a Director of Diversity
  Strategies and Development and an Associate Director of Human Resources of
  Paine Webber. The business address of each officer is 1 Madison Avenue, New
  York, New York 10010.

                                      31

<PAGE>

                         INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT

To the Board of Directors
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company:

We have audited the accompanying statements of assets and liabilities of the
State Street Research Growth, State Street Research Income, State Street
Research Money Market, State Street Research Diversified, State Street
Research Aggressive Growth, MetLife Stock Index, Santander International
Stock, Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond, Janus Mid Cap, T. Rowe Price Small Cap
Growth, Scudder Global Equity, Harris Oakmark Large Cap Value, Neuberger
Berman Partners Mid Cap Value, T. Rowe Price Large Cap Growth, Lehman Brothers
Aggregate Bond Index, Morgan Stanley EAFE Index, Russell 2000 Index, Janus
Large Cap Growth, Invesco VIF High Yield, Invesco VIF Industrial Income,
Invesco VIF Realty and Templeton International Stock Portfolios of
Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL (the "Separate Account") as of December
31, 1999, and the related statements (i) of operations for the year ended
December 31, 1999 and of changes in net assets for the years ended December
31, 1999 and 1998 of the State Street Research Growth, State Street Research
Income, State Street Research Money Market, State Street Research Diversified,
State Street Research Aggressive Growth, MetLife Stock Index, Santander
International Stock, Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond, Janus Mid Cap, T. Rowe
Price Small Cap Growth, Scudder Global Equity, Harris Oakmark Large Cap Value,
Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap Value, T. Rowe Price Large Cap Growth,
Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index, Morgan Stanley EAFE Index and Russell
2000 Index Portfolios and (ii) of operations and of changes in net assets for
the period May 3, 1999 (commencement of operations) to December 31, 1999 of
Janus Large Cap Growth, Invesco VIF High Yield, Invesco VIF Industrial Income,
Invesco VIF Realty and Templeton International Stock Portfolios. These
financial statements are the responsibility of the Separate Account's
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial
statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards 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. Our
procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of December 31, 1999
by correspondence with the custodian and the depositor of the Separate
Account. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, such financial statements present fairly, in all material
respects, the financial position of the State Street Research Growth, State
Street Research Income, State Street Research Money Market, State Street
Research Diversified, State Street Research Aggressive Growth, MetLife Stock
Index, Santander International Stock, Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond, Janus Mid
Cap, T. Rowe Price Small Cap Growth, Scudder Global Equity, Harris Oakmark
Large Cap Value, Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap Value, T. Rowe Price Large
Cap Growth, Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index, Morgan Stanley EAFE Index,
Russell 2000 Index, Janus Large Cap Growth, Invesco VIF High Yield, Invesco
VIF Industrial Income, Invesco VIF Realty and Templeton International Stock
Portfolios of Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL as of December 31, 1999
and the results of their operations and the changes in their net assets for
the respective stated periods, in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles.

We did not audit the financial statements for the Templeton Variable Products
Series Fund, the Janus Aspen Series Fund and the Investco Investment Funds,
Inc., of which the investment information for these funds is summarized in
Note 5 to the financial statements. The financial statements for these funds
were audited by other auditors.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP
Tampa, Florida

March 27, 2000

                                       1
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                      STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
                              At December 31, 1999

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                    State Street              State Street
                          State Street State Street   Research   State Street   Research
                            Research     Research      Money       Research    Aggressive
                             Growth       Income       Market    Diversified     Growth
                           Portfolio    Portfolio    Portfolio    Portfolio    Portfolio
                          ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------
ASSETS:
<S>                       <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Investments at Value
 (Note 2A):
State Street Research
 Growth Portfolio
 (10,745,186 shares;
 cost $333,312,756).....  $420,566,549         --           --            --           --
State Street Research
 Income Portfolio
 (5,620,168 shares; cost
 $70,920,972)...........           --  $65,643,563          --            --           --
State Street Research
 Money Market Portfolio
 (3,197,886 shares; cost
 $34,029,917)...........           --          --   $33,075,729           --           --
State Street Research
 Diversified Portfolio
 (13,568,374 shares;
 cost $225,692,070).....           --          --           --   $247,894,193          --
State Street Research
 Aggressive Growth
 Portfolio (5,593,963
 shares; cost
 $149,637,856)..........           --          --           --            --  $215,087,902
MetLife Stock Index
 Portfolio (6,441,446
 shares;
 cost $196,867,091).....           --          --           --            --           --
Santander International
 Stock Portfolio
 (3,175,743 shares ;
 cost $41,292,139)......           --          --           --            --           --
Loomis Sayles High Yield
 Bond Portfolio (541,135
 shares; cost
 $5,032,558)............           --          --           --            --           --
Janus Mid Cap Portfolio
 (3,102,796 shares; cost
 $64,508,142)...........           --          --           --            --           --
T. Rowe Price Small Cap
 Growth Portfolio
 (2,043,071 shares; cost
 $24,804,658)...........           --          --           --            --           --
Scudder Global Equity
 Portfolio (970,303
 shares;
 cost $11,980,830)......           --          --           --            --           --
Harris Oakmark Large Cap
 Value Portfolio (33,250
 shares; cost $310,760).           --          --           --            --           --
Neuberger Berman
 Partners Mid Cap Value
 Portfolio (49,457
 shares; cost $575,293).           --          --           --            --           --
T. Rowe Price Large Cap
 Growth Portfolio
 (96,515 shares; cost
 $1,121,477)............           --          --           --            --           --
Lehman Brothers
 Aggregate Bond Index
 Portfolio (56,961
 shares; cost $565,809).           --          --           --            --           --
Morgan Stanley EAFE
 Index Portfolio (93,368
 shares;
 cost $1,085,242).......           --          --           --            --           --
Russell 2000 Index
 Portfolio (36,094
 shares; cost $410,863).           --          --           --            --           --
Janus Large Cap Growth
 Portfolio (2,864
 shares;
 cost $85,665)..........           --          --           --            --           --
Invesco VIF High Yield
 Portfolio (280 shares;
 cost $3,233)...........           --          --           --            --           --
Invesco VIF Industrial
 Income Portfolio (279
 shares;
 cost $5,827))..........           --          --           --            --           --
Invesco VIF Realty
 Portfolio (200 shares;
 cost $1,500)...........           --          --           --            --           --
Templeton International
 Stock (307 shares; cost
 $6,351)................           --          --           --            --           --
                          ------------ -----------  -----------  ------------ ------------
Total Investments.......   420,566,549  65,643,563   33,075,729   247,894,193  215,087,902
Cash and Accounts
 Receivable.............            20           0            0             0            0
                          ------------ -----------  -----------  ------------ ------------
Total Assets............   420,566,569  65,643,563   33,075,729   247,894,193  215,087,902
LIABILITIES.............       898,400      12,123        2,247       191,488      417,916
                          ------------ -----------  -----------  ------------ ------------
NET ASSETS..............  $419,668,169 $65,631,440  $33,073,482  $247,702,705 $214,669,986
                          ============ ===========  ===========  ============ ============
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       2
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                              Loomis                  T. Rowe                Harris     Neuberger
  MetLife       Santander     Sayles                   Price      Scudder    Oakmark     Berman
   Stock      International High Yield    Janus      Small Cap    Global    Large Cap   Partners
   Index          Stock        Bond      Mid Cap      Growth      Equity      Value   Mid Cap Value
 Portfolio      Portfolio   Portfolio   Portfolio    Portfolio   Portfolio  Portfolio   Portfolio
- ------------  ------------- ---------- ------------ ----------- ----------- --------- -------------
<S>           <C>           <C>        <C>          <C>         <C>         <C>       <C>
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
$261,458,295           --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --    $44,047,550         --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --   $4,918,907          --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --  $113,376,167         --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --  $32,137,518         --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --  $14,467,210      --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --  $296,920         --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --     $592,005
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
         --            --          --           --          --          --       --          --
- ------------   -----------  ---------- ------------ ----------- ----------- --------    --------
 261,458,295    44,047,550   4,918,907  113,376,167  32,137,518  14,467,210  296,920     592,005
      84,625             0      35,301            0      11,803      30,687   42,578         285
- ------------   -----------  ---------- ------------ ----------- ----------- --------    --------
 261,542,920    44,047,550   4,954,208  113,376,167  32,149,321  14,497,897  339,498     592,290
     248,062       122,989           0      297,416           0           0        0           0
- ------------   -----------  ---------- ------------ ----------- ----------- --------    --------
$261,294,858   $43,924,561  $4,954,208 $113,078,751 $32,149,321 $14,497,897 $339,498    $592,290
============   ===========  ========== ============ =========== =========== ========    ========
</TABLE>

                                       3
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES (Continued)
                              At December 31, 1999

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                       T. Rowe     Lehman     Morgan
                                        Price     Brothers   Stanley    Russell
                                      Large Cap  Aggregate     EAFE      2000
                                       Growth    Bond Index   Index      Index
                                      Portfolio  Portfolio  Portfolio  Portfolio
ASSETS:                              ----------- ---------- ---------- ---------
<S>                                  <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>
Investments at Value (Note 2A):
State Street Research Growth
 Portfolio (10,745,186 shares; cost
 $333,312,756).....................         --         --          --       --
State Street Research Income
 Portfolio (5,620,168 shares; cost
 $70,920,972)......................         --         --          --       --
State Street Research Money Market
 Portfolio (3,197,886 shares; cost
 $34,029,917)......................         --         --          --       --
State Street Research Diversified
 Portfolio (13,568,374 shares; cost
 $225,692,070).....................         --         --          --       --
State Street Research Aggressive
 Growth Portfolio (5,593,963
 shares; cost $149,637,856)........         --         --          --       --
MetLife Stock Index Portfolio
 (6,441,446 shares;
 cost $196,867,091)................         --         --          --       --
Santander International Stock
 Portfolio (3,175,743 shares ; cost
 $41,292,139)......................         --         --          --       --
Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond
 Portfolio (541,135 shares; cost
 $5,032,558).......................         --         --          --       --
Janus Mid Cap Portfolio (3,102,796
 shares;
 cost $64,508,142).................         --         --          --       --
T. Rowe Price Small Cap Growth
 Portfolio (2,043,071 shares; cost
 $24,804,658)......................         --         --          --       --
Scudder Global Equity Portfolio
 (970,303 shares;
 cost $11,980,830).................         --         --          --       --
Harris Oakmark Large Cap Value
 Portfolio (33,250 shares; cost
 $310,760).........................         --         --          --       --
Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap
 Value Portfolio (49,457 shares;
 cost $575,293)....................         --         --          --       --
T. Rowe Price Large Cap Growth
 Portfolio (96,515 shares; cost
 $1,121,477).......................  $1,294,264        --          --       --
Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond
 Index Portfolio (56,961 shares;
 cost $565,809)....................         --    $538,275         --       --
Morgan Stanley EAFE Index Portfolio
 (93,368 shares;
 cost $1,085,242)..................         --         --   $1,245,531      --
Russell 2000 Index Portfolio
 (36,094 shares; cost $410,863)....         --         --          --  $451,900
Janus Large Cap Growth Portfolio
 (2,864 shares;
 cost $85,665).....................         --         --          --       --
Invesco VIF High Yield Portfolio
 (280 shares; cost $3,233).........         --         --          --       --
Invesco VIF Industrial Income
 Portfolio (279 shares;
 cost $5,827)).....................         --         --          --       --
Invesco VIF Realty Portfolio (200
 shares; cost $1,500)..............         --         --          --       --
Templeton International Stock (307
 shares; cost $6,351)..............         --         --          --       --
                                     ----------   --------  ---------- --------
 Total Investments.................   1,294,264    538,275   1,245,531  451,900
Cash and Accounts Receivable.......           0     22,766           0       88
                                     ----------   --------  ---------- --------
 Total Assets......................   1,294,264    561,041   1,245,531  451,988
LIABILITIES........................      40,869          0      23,869        0
                                     ----------   --------  ---------- --------
NET ASSETS.........................  $1,253,395   $561,041  $1,221,662 $451,988
                                     ==========   ========  ========== ========
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       4
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


  Janus     Invesco   Invesco VIF  Invesco    Templeton
Large Cap     VIF     Industrial     VIF    International
 Growth    High Yield   Income     Realty       Stock
Portfolio  Portfolio   Portfolio  Portfolio   Portfolio       Total
- ---------  ---------- ----------- --------- ------------- --------------
<S>        <C>        <C>         <C>       <C>           <C>
     --         --         --         --          --      $  420,566,549
     --         --         --         --          --          65,643,563
     --         --         --         --          --          33,075,729
     --         --         --         --          --         247,894,193
     --         --         --         --          --         215,087,902
     --         --         --         --          --         261,458,295
     --         --         --         --          --          44,047,550
     --         --         --         --          --           4,918,907
     --         --         --         --          --         113,376,167
     --         --         --         --          --          32,137,518
     --         --         --         --          --          14,467,210
     --         --         --         --          --             296,920
     --         --         --         --          --             592,005
     --         --         --         --          --           1,294,264
     --         --         --         --          --             538,275
     --         --         --         --          --           1,245,531
     --         --         --         --          --             451,900
 $96,373        --         --         --          --              96,373
     --      $3,227        --         --          --               3,227
     --         --      $5,872        --          --               5,872
     --         --         --      $1,584         --               1,584
     --         --         --         --       $6,832              6,832
 -------     ------     ------     ------      ------     --------------
  96,373      3,227      5,872      1,584       6,832      1,457,206,366
       0          0          0          0           0            228,153
 -------     ------     ------     ------      ------     --------------
  96,373      3,227      5,872      1,584       6,832      1,457,434,519
       0          0          0          0           0          2,255,379
 -------     ------     ------     ------      ------     --------------
 $96,373     $3,227     $5,872     $1,584      $6,832     $1,455,179,140
 =======     ======     ======     ======      ======     ==============
</TABLE>


                                       5
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                            STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        For the year ended December 31, 1999
                          ------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     State Street               State Street
                          State Street State Street    Research   State Street    Research
                            Research     Research       Money       Research     Aggressive
                             Growth       Income        Market    Diversified      Growth
                           Portfolio    Portfolio     Portfolio    Portfolio     Portfolio
                          ------------ ------------  ------------ ------------  ------------
<S>                       <C>          <C>           <C>          <C>           <C>
INVESTMENT INCOME:
Income:
 Dividends (Note 3).....  $44,038,080  $ 4,181,436    $1,538,117  $20,799,436   $ 4,466,938
Expenses:
 Mortality and expense
  charges (Note 4)......    3,209,889      499,462       241,265    1,973,981     1,429,076
                          -----------  -----------    ----------  -----------   -----------
Net investment income
 (loss).................   40,828,191    3,681,974     1,296,852   18,825,455     3,037,862
                          -----------  -----------    ----------  -----------   -----------
NET REALIZED AND
 UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS)
 ON INVESTMENTS: (Note
 2B)
Net realized gain (loss)
 from security
 transactions...........    3,593,964       15,187       245,673      743,624     1,280,373
Change in unrealized
 appreciation
 (depreciation) of
 investments............   16,515,105   (5,496,396)     (275,023)  (2,237,161)   47,914,985
                          -----------  -----------    ----------  -----------   -----------
Net realized and
 unrealized gain (loss)
 on investments.........   20,109,069   (5,481,209)      (29,350)  (1,493,537)   49,195,358
                          -----------  -----------    ----------  -----------   -----------
NET INCREASE (DECREASE)
 IN NET ASSETS FROM
 OPERATIONS.............  $60,937,260  $(1,799,235)   $1,267,502  $17,331,918   $52,233,220
                          ===========  ===========    ==========  ===========   ===========
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       6
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             Loomis                 T. Rowe                Harris      Neuberger
  MetLife      Santander     Sayles                  Price      Scudder    Oakmark      Berman
   Stock     International High Yield     Janus    Small Cap     Global   Large Cap    Partners
   Index         Stock        Bond       Mid Cap     Growth      Equity     Value    Mid Cap Value
 Portfolio     Portfolio   Portfolio    Portfolio  Portfolio   Portfolio  Portfolio    Portfolio
- -----------  ------------- ----------  ----------- ----------  ---------- ---------  -------------
<S>          <C>           <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>
$12,076,347   $ 6,737,411  $ 384,074   $ 5,416,355 $        0  $  486,049 $  2,973      $13,508
  1,722,924       334,318     32,947       432,040    159,812      86,933      615          627
- -----------   -----------  ---------   ----------- ----------  ---------- --------      -------
 10,353,423     6,403,093    351,127     4,984,315   (159,812)    399,116    2,358       12,881
- -----------   -----------  ---------   ----------- ----------  ---------- --------      -------
  3,899,836       528,185   (159,077)    1,140,427     41,394     272,213   (5,489)         679
 24,029,258    (1,137,521)   384,776    44,344,823  6,830,580   1,937,990  (13,841)      16,713
- -----------   -----------  ---------   ----------- ----------  ---------- --------      -------
 27,929,094      (609,336)   225,699    45,485,250  6,871,974   2,210,203  (19,330)      17,392
- -----------   -----------  ---------   ----------- ----------  ---------- --------      -------
$38,282,517   $ 5,793,757  $ 576,826   $50,469,565 $6,712,162  $2,609,319 $(16,972)     $30,273
===========   ===========  =========   =========== ==========  ========== ========      =======
</TABLE>

                                       7
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                      STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS (Continued)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         For the year ended December 31, 1999
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                        T. Rowe    Lehman    Morgan
                                         Price    Brothers   Stanley   Russell
                                       Large Cap Aggregate    EAFE      2000
                                        Growth   Bond Index   Index     Index
                                       Portfolio Portfolio  Portfolio Portfolio
                                       --------- ---------- --------- ---------
<S>                                    <C>       <C>        <C>       <C>
INVESTMENT INCOME:
Income:
 Dividends (Note 3)..................  $  5,264   $ 24,999  $ 15,956   $13,398
Expenses:
 Mortality and expense charges (Note
  4).................................     4,482      2,156     4,919     1,131
                                       --------   --------  --------   -------
Net investment income (loss).........       782     22,843    11,037    12,267
                                       --------   --------  --------   -------
NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN
 (LOSS) ON INVESTMENTS: (Note 2B)
Net realized gain (loss) from
 security transactions...............     2,027     (1,189)   92,428    10,610
Change in unrealized appreciation
 (depreciation) of investments.......   172,687    (27,533)  160,288    41,036
                                       --------   --------  --------   -------
Net realized and unrealized gain
 (loss) on investments...............   174,714    (28,722)  252,716    51,646
                                       --------   --------  --------   -------
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS
 FROM OPERATIONS.....................  $175,496   $ (5,879) $263,753   $63,913
                                       ========   ========  ========   =======
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       8
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
      For the period May 3, 1999 to December 31, 1999
- -------------------------------------------------------------

   Janus       Invesco    Invesco VIF  Invesco    Templeton
 Large Cap       VIF      Industrial     VIF    International
  Growth      High Yield    Income     Realty       Stock
 Portfolio    Portfolio    Portfolio  Portfolio   Portfolio      Total
- -----------  ------------ ----------- --------- ------------- ------------
<S>          <C>          <C>         <C>       <C>           <C>
  $     0        $ 0          $ 0        $ 0        $  0      $100,200,341
       61          0            0          1           5        10,136,644
  -------        ---          ---        ---        ----      ------------
      (61)         0            0         (1)         (5)       90,063,697
  -------        ---          ---        ---        ----      ------------
       79          0            0          0          32        11,700,976
   10,708         (6)          45         84         481       133,172,078
  -------        ---          ---        ---        ----      ------------
   10,787         (6)          45         84         513       144,873,054
  -------        ---          ---        ---        ----      ------------
  $10,726        $(6)         $45        $83        $508      $234,936,751
  =======        ===          ===        ===        ====      ============
</TABLE>

                                       9
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                      STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                            State Street Research       State Street Research       State Street Research
                              Growth Portfolio            Income Portfolio         Money Market Portfolio
                          --------------------------  --------------------------  --------------------------
                          For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year
                             Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended
                          December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,
                              1999          1998          1999          1998          1999          1998
                          ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------
<S>                       <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN
 NET ASSETS:
 From operations:
 Net investment income
  (loss)................  $ 40,828,191  $ 27,785,410  $ 3,681,974   $ 3,877,871   $  1,296,852  $  1,022,138
 Net realized gain
  (loss) from security
  transactions..........     3,593,964     1,828,922       15,187       239,248        245,673       139,583
 Change in unrealized
  appreciation
  (depreciation) of
  investments...........    16,515,105    38,462,367   (5,496,396)      (12,424)      (275,023)     (384,125)
                          ------------  ------------  -----------   -----------   ------------  ------------
 Net increase (decrease)
  in net assets from
  operations............    60,937,260    68,076,699   (1,799,235)    4,104,695      1,267,502       777,596
                          ------------  ------------  -----------   -----------   ------------  ------------
 From capital
  transactions:
 Net premiums...........    76,267,713    68,697,236   15,797,917    13,501,414     35,768,800    28,800,532
 Redemptions............   (15,563,840)   (9,651,413)  (1,719,595)   (1,455,088)      (296,905)     (292,311)
 Net portfolio
  transfers.............     3,590,588       462,907    2,922,342     2,032,607    (23,898,442)  (12,984,969)
 Other net transfers....   (38,125,701)  (33,909,522)  (6,009,960)   (5,444,551)    (2,027,635)   (2,036,921)
                          ------------  ------------  -----------   -----------   ------------  ------------
 Net increase in net
  assets from capital
  transactions..........    26,168,760    25,599,208   10,990,704     8,634,382      9,545,818    13,486,331
                          ------------  ------------  -----------   -----------   ------------  ------------
NET CHANGE IN NET
 ASSETS.................    87,106,020    93,675,907    9,191,469    12,739,077     10,813,320    14,263,927
NET ASSETS--BEGINNING OF
 YEAR...................   332,562,149   238,886,242   56,439,971    43,700,894     22,260,162     7,996,235
                          ------------  ------------  -----------   -----------   ------------  ------------
NET ASSETS--END OF YEAR.  $419,668,169  $332,562,149  $65,631,440   $56,439,971   $ 33,073,482  $ 22,260,162
                          ============  ============  ===========   ===========   ============  ============
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       10
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                              State Street Research
  State Street Research         Aggressive Growth                MetLife                      Santander
  Diversified Portfolio             Portfolio             Stock Index Portfolio     International Stock Portfolio
- --------------------------  --------------------------  --------------------------  -------------------------------
For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year   For the Year     For the Year
   Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended          Ended            Ended
December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,   December 31,     December 31,
    1999          1998          1999          1998          1999          1998           1999             1998
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------
<S>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>              <C>
$ 18,825,455  $ 17,838,146  $  3,037,862  $  7,473,609  $ 10,353,423  $  5,466,190  $    6,403,093   $      119,967

     743,624       522,086     1,280,373       390,678     3,899,836     2,060,324         528,185          251,518

  (2,237,161)   12,721,568    47,914,985     9,316,026    24,029,258    21,573,004      (1,137,521)       5,740,557
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------

  17,331,918    31,081,800    52,233,220    17,180,313    38,282,517    29,099,518       5,793,757        6,112,042
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------

  54,466,186    48,746,380    41,977,555    48,080,744    80,432,444    59,343,787       8,765,614       10,224,172
  (8,542,813)   (5,712,146)   (6,935,090)   (4,373,459)   (5,037,136)   (2,361,734)     (1,805,287)      (1,153,624)
   2,267,794     2,809,643    (8,586,687)   (6,687,894)   20,459,060     9,729,932      (1,507,125)      (2,377,311)
 (26,640,820)  (23,504,994)  (18,101,172)  (18,773,580)  (31,708,703)  (23,041,439)     (3,575,131)      (3,678,501)
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------

  21,550,347    22,338,883     8,354,606    18,245,811    64,145,665    43,670,546       1,878,071        3,014,736
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------
  38,882,265    53,420,683    60,587,826    35,426,124   102,428,182    72,770,064       7,671,828        9,126,778

 208,820,440   155,399,757   154,082,160   118,656,036   158,866,676    86,096,612      36,252,733       27,125,955
- ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------  --------------   --------------
$247,702,705  $208,820,440  $214,669,986  $154,082,160  $261,294,858  $158,866,676  $   43,924,561   $   36,252,733
============  ============  ============  ============  ============  ============  ==============   ==============
</TABLE>

                                       11
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS (Continued)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      T. Rowe Price
                                Loomis Sayles                 Janus                 Small Cap Growth
                          High Yield Bond Portfolio     Mid Cap Portfolio               Portfolio
                          ------------------------- --------------------------  --------------------------
                          For the Year For the Year For the Year  For the Year  For the Year  For the Year
                             Ended        Ended        Ended         Ended         Ended         Ended
                          December 31, December 31, December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,
                              1999         1998         1999          1998          1999          1998
                          ------------ ------------ ------------  ------------  ------------  ------------
<S>                       <C>          <C>          <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN
 NET ASSETS:
 From operations:
 Net investment income
  (loss)................   $  351,127   $  241,444  $  4,984,315  $     9,561   $  (159,812)  $   (71,325)
 Net realized gain
  (loss) from security
  transactions..........     (159,077)     (15,746)    1,140,427      178,428        41,394       (14,908)
 Change in unrealized
  appreciation
  (depreciation) of
  investments...........      384,776     (428,334)   44,344,823    4,299,801     6,830,580       455,213
                           ----------   ----------  ------------  -----------   -----------   -----------
 Net increase (decrease)
  in net assets from
  operations............      576,826     (202,636)   50,469,565    4,487,790     6,712,162       368,980
                           ----------   ----------  ------------  -----------   -----------   -----------
 From capital
  transactions:
 Net premiums...........    1,766,270    1,559,975    31,140,404   13,796,446    10,707,741     8,413,079
 Redemptions............     (387,694)     (29,635)   (1,283,943)    (179,560)     (556,621)      (87,656)
 Net portfolio
  transfers.............    1,046,383      180,422    24,344,237    4,280,509     5,288,531     3,021,876
 Other net transfers....     (587,488)    (451,340)  (12,718,059)  (5,121,876)   (3,307,953)   (2,968,930)
                           ----------   ----------  ------------  -----------   -----------   -----------
 Net increase in net
  assets from capital
  transactions..........    1,837,471    1,259,422    41,482,639   12,775,519    12,131,698     8,378,369
                           ----------   ----------  ------------  -----------   -----------   -----------
NET CHANGE IN NET
 ASSETS.................    2,414,297    1,056,786    91,952,204   17,263,309    18,843,860     8,747,349
NET ASSETS--BEGINNING OF
 YEAR...................    2,539,911    1,483,125    21,126,547    3,863,238    13,305,461     4,558,112
                           ----------   ----------  ------------  -----------   -----------   -----------
NET ASSETS--END OF YEAR.   $4,954,208   $2,539,911  $113,078,751  $21,126,547   $32,149,321   $13,305,461
                           ==========   ==========  ============  ===========   ===========   ===========
</TABLE>



                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       12
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
          Scudder                   Harris Oakmark        Neuberger Berman Partners          T. Rowe Price
  Global Equity Portfolio      Large Cap Value Portfolio    Mid Cap Value Portfolio   Large Cap Growth Portfolio
 ---------------------------- --------------------------- --------------------------- ---------------------------
                                           For the Period              For the Period              For the Period
 For the Year   For the Year  For the Year  November 9,   For the Year  November 9,   For the Year  November 9,
    Ended          Ended         Ended        1998 to        Ended        1998 to        Ended        1998 to
 December 31,   December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,
     1999           1998          1999          1998          1999          1998          1999          1998
 ------------   ------------  ------------ -------------- ------------ -------------- ------------ --------------
 <S>            <C>           <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>
 $   399,116    $    82,316     $  2,358        $ 0         $ 12,881        $ 0        $      782       $ 0

     272,213         35,936       (5,489)         0              679          0             2,027         0

   1,937,990        556,946      (13,841)         0           16,713          0           172,687         0
 -----------    -----------     --------        ---         --------        ---        ----------       ---

   2,609,319        675,198      (16,972)         0           30,273          0           175,496         0
 -----------    -----------     --------        ---         --------        ---        ----------       ---

   4,574,226      3,660,518      125,384          0          162,181          0           141,433         0
    (541,665)       (44,451)      (8,780)         0                0          0                 0         0
     985,125      2,251,711      224,137          0          433,203          0         1,037,195         0
  (1,431,966)    (1,263,459)      15,729          0          (33,367)         0          (100,729)        0
 -----------    -----------     --------        ---         --------        ---        ----------       ---

   3,585,720      4,604,319      356,470          0          562,017          0         1,077,899         0
 -----------    -----------     --------        ---         --------        ---        ----------       ---
   6,195,039      5,279,517      339,498          0          592,290          0         1,253,395         0

   8,302,858      3,023,341            0          0                0          0                 0         0
 -----------    -----------     --------        ---         --------        ---        ----------       ---
 $14,497,897    $ 8,302,858     $339,498        $ 0         $592,290        $ 0        $1,253,395       $ 0
 ===========    ===========     ========        ===         ========        ===        ==========       ===
</TABLE>

                                       13
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS (Continued)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                           Lehman Brothers Aggregate        Morgan Stanley               Russell 2000
                             Bond Index Portfolio        EAFE Index Portfolio           Index Portfolio
                          --------------------------- --------------------------- ---------------------------
                                       For the Period              For the Period              For the Period
                          For the Year  November 9,   For the Year  November 9,   For the Year  November 9,
                             Ended        1998 to        Ended        1998 to        Ended        1998 to
                          December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,  December 31,
                              1999          1998          1999          1998          1999          1998
                          ------------ -------------- ------------ -------------- ------------ --------------
<S>                       <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN
 NET ASSETS:
 From operations:
 Net investment income
  (loss)................    $ 22,843        $ 0        $   11,037       $ 0         $ 12,267        $ 0
 Net realized gain
  (loss) from security
  transactions..........      (1,189)         0            92,428         0           10,610          0
 Change in unrealized
  appreciation
  (depreciation) of
  investments...........     (27,533)         0           160,288         0           41,036          0
                            --------        ---        ----------       ---         --------        ---
 Net increase (decrease)
  in net assets from
  operations............      (5,879)         0           263,753         0           63,913          0
                            --------        ---        ----------       ---         --------        ---
 From capital
  transactions:
 Net premiums...........      93,732          0           139,276         0          214,532          0
 Redemptions............      (1,012)         0            (1,812)        0           (1,472)         0
 Net portfolio
  transfers.............     484,526          0           862,477         0          219,845          0
 Other net transfers....     (10,326)         0           (42,032)        0          (44,830)         0
                            --------        ---        ----------       ---         --------        ---
 Net increase in net
  assets from capital
  transactions..........     566,920          0           957,909         0          388,075          0
                            --------        ---        ----------       ---         --------        ---
NET CHANGE IN NET
 ASSETS.................     561,041          0         1,221,662         0          451,988          0

NET ASSETS--BEGINNING OF
 YEAR...................           0          0                 0         0                0          0
                            --------        ---        ----------       ---         --------        ---
NET ASSETS--END OF YEAR.    $561,041        $ 0        $1,221,662       $ 0         $451,988        $ 0
                            ========        ===        ==========       ===         ========        ===
</TABLE>

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.

                                       14
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                   Invesco VIF      Invesco VIF                        Templeton
Janus Large Cap     High Yield   Industrial Income   Invesco VIF     International
Growth Portfolio    Portfolio        Portfolio     Realty Portfolio Stock Portfolio             TOTAL
- ----------------  -------------- ----------------- ---------------- --------------- ------------------------------
 For the Period   For the Period  For the Period    For the Period  For the Period   For the Year    For the Year
 May 3, 1999 to   May 3, 1999 to  May 3, 1999 to    May 3, 1999 to  May 3, 1999 to      Ended           Ended
  December 31,     December 31,    December 31,      December 31,    December 31,    December 31,    December 31,
      1999            1999             1999             1999             1999            1999            1998
- ----------------  -------------- ----------------- ---------------- --------------- --------------  --------------
<S>               <C>            <C>               <C>              <C>             <C>             <C>
    $   (61)          $    0          $    0            $   (1)         $   (5)     $   90,063,697  $   63,845,327
         79                0               0                 0              32          11,700,976       5,616,069
     10,708               (6)             45                84             481         133,172,078      92,300,599
    -------           ------          ------            ------          ------      --------------  --------------
     10,726               (6)             45                83             508         234,936,751     161,761,995
    -------           ------          ------            ------          ------      --------------  --------------
         99                0               0                 0           1,166         362,542,673     304,824,283
          0                0               0                 0               0         (42,683,665)    (25,341,077)
     86,070            3,236           5,802             1,524           5,208          30,275,029       2,719,433
       (522)              (3)             25               (23)            (50)       (144,450,716)   (120,195,113)
    -------           ------          ------            ------          ------      --------------  --------------
     85,647            3,233           5,827             1,501           6,324         205,683,321     162,007,526
    -------           ------          ------            ------          ------      --------------  --------------
     96,373            3,227           5,872             1,584           6,832         440,620,072     323,769,521
          0                0               0                 0               0       1,014,559,068     690,789,547
    -------           ------          ------            ------          ------      --------------  --------------
    $96,373           $3,227          $5,872            $1,584          $6,832      $1,455,179,140  $1,014,559,068
    =======           ======          ======            ======          ======      ==============  ==============
</TABLE>

                                       15
<PAGE>

                     Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL

                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                               December 31, 1999

1.BUSINESS

  Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL (the "Separate Account") is a multi-
division unit investment trust registered under the Investment Company Act of
1940. The five divisions are ULII, IVUL, GVUL, UL2001 and VAI. The Separate
Account presently consists of twenty-two investment portfolios used to support
variable universal life insurance policies. The assets in each portfolio are
invested in shares of the corresponding portfolio of the Metropolitan Series
Fund, Inc., the Janus Aspen Series Fund, the Invesco Variable Investment
Funds, Inc. and the Templeton Variable Products Series Fund (the "Funds").
Each portfolio has varying investment objectives relative to growth of capital
and income.

  The Separate Account was formed by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
("Metropolitan Life"), on December 13, 1988 and registered as a unit
investment trust on January 5, 1990. The assets of the Separate Account are
the property of Metropolitan Life. On May 3, 1999, operations commenced for
the five new investment portfolios added to the Separate Account on that date:
the Janus Large Cap Growth Portfolio, the Invesco VIF High Yield Portfolio,
the Invesco VIF Industrial Income Portfolio, the Invesco VIF Realty Portfolio
and the Templeton International Stock Portfolio. On November 9, 1998,
operations commenced for the six new investment portfolios added to the
Separate Account on that date: the Harris Oakmark Large Cap Value Portfolio,
the Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap Value Portfolio, the T. Rowe Price Large
Cap Growth Portfolio, the Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index Portfolio, the
Morgan Stanley EAFE Index Portfolio and the Russell 2000 Index Portfolio.

2.SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

  A.Valuation of Investments

    Investments in shares of the Funds are valued at the reported net asset
    values of the respective portfolios. A summary of investments of the
    twenty-two designated portfolios of the Funds in which the five
    investment divisions of the Separate Account invest as of December 31,
    1999 is included as Note 5.

  B.Security Transactions

    Purchases and sales are recorded on the trade date. Realized gains and
    losses on sales of investments are determined on the basis of
    identified cost.

  C.Federal Income Taxes

    In the opinion of counsel of Metropolitan Life, the Separate Account
    will be treated as a part of Metropolitan Life and its operations, and
    the Separate Account will not be taxed as a "regulated investment
    company" under existing law. Metropolitan Life is taxed as a life
    insurance company. The policies permit Metropolitan Life to charge
    against the Separate Account any taxes or reserve for taxes,
    attributable to the maintenance or operation of the Separate Account.
    Metropolitan Life is not currently charging any federal income taxes
    against the Separate Account arising from the earnings of realized
    capital gains attributable to the Separate Account. Such charges may be
    imposed in future years depending on market fluctuations and
    transactions involving the Separate Account.

  D.Net Premiums

    Metropolitan Life deducts a sales load and a state premium tax charge
    from premiums before amounts are allocated to the Separate Account. In
    certain policies, Metropolitan Life also deducts a Federal income tax
    charge before amounts are allocated to the Separate Account. The
    Federal income tax charge is imposed on certain policies to recover a
    portion of the Federal income tax adjustment attributable to policy
    acquisition expenses.

                                      16
<PAGE>

                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)


3.DIVIDENDS

  On May 4, 1999 and December 16, 1999, the Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.
declared dividends for all shareholders of record on May 7, 1999 and December
21, 1999 respectively. The amount of dividends received by the Separate
Account was $100,200,341. The dividends were paid to Metropolitan Life on May
11, 1999 and December 22, 1999, respectively, and were immediately reinvested
in additional shares of the portfolios in which the investment divisions
invest. As a result of this reinvestment, the number of shares of the
Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc. held by each of the sixteen investment
portfolios increased by the following: State Street Research Growth Portfolio,
1,168,696 shares; State Street Research Income Portfolio, 357,372 shares;
State Street Research Money Market Portfolio, 148,919 shares; State Street
Research Diversified Portfolio, 1,161,405 shares; State Street Research
Aggressive Growth Portfolio, 126,713 shares; MetLife Stock Index Portfolio,
307,335 shares; Santander International Stock Portfolio, 495,499 shares;
Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond Portfolio, 42,345 shares; Janus Mid Cap
Portfolio, 164,544 shares; Scudder Global Equity Portfolio, 34,867 shares;
Harris Oakmark Large Cap Value Portfolio, 343 shares; Neuberger Berman
Partners Mid Cap Value Portfolio, 1,185 shares; T. Rowe Price Large Cap Growth
Portfolio, 410 shares; Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond Index Portfolio, 2,648
shares; Morgan Stanley EAFE Index Portfolio, 1,260 shares and Russell 2000
Index Portfolio, 1,133 shares.

  No dividends were received by the T. Rowe Price Small Cap Growth Portfolio,
the Janus Large Cap Growth Portfolio, the Invesco VIF High Yield Portfolio,
the Invesco VIF Industrial Income Portfolio, the Invesco VIF Realty Portfolio
or the Templeton International Stock Portfolio.

4.EXPENSES

  For assets in the Separate Account that support certain policies,
Metropolitan Life applies a charge against the assets attributable to the
Separate Account for the mortality and expense risks assumed by Metropolitan
Life. This charge varies by policy type but will be higher than an effective
annual rate of .90% of the average daily value of the net assets of the
monthly anniversary value of the net assets in the Separate Account
attributable to such policies.

                                      17
<PAGE>

                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999

  Investment information, summarized by investment type and industry sector,
for each portfolio in which the Separate Account invests is presented below:

                        Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                             State Street            State Street          State Street           State Street
                               Research                Research              Research               Research
                                Growth                  Income             Money Market           Diversified
                              Portfolio               Portfolio             Portfolio              Portfolio
                            --------------           ------------          ------------          --------------
                                Value                   Value                 Value                  Value
                              (Note 2A)               (Note 2A)             (Note 2A)              (Note 2A)
 <S>                        <C>             <C>      <C>          <C>      <C>          <C>      <C>            <C>
 COMMON STOCK
 Banking.................   $   82,527,431    (2.3%)                                             $   37,290,000   (1.3%)
 Biotechnology...........       54,963,147    (1.5%)                                                 24,690,597   (0.9%)
 Broadcasting............      296,377,400    (8.2%)                                                133,419,212   (4.6%)
 Business Services.......      112,535,700    (3.1%)                                                 50,496,775   (1.8%)
 Chemicals...............       76,861,100    (2.1%)                                                 34,515,338   (1.2%)
 Computer Equipment &
  Service................      256,218,167    (7.1%)                                                115,412,728   (4.0%)
 Consumer Products.......       41,549,200    (1.1%)                                                 18,585,325   (0.6%)
 Drugs & Health Care.....      199,768,100    (5.5%)                                                 89,658,175   (3.1%)
 Electrical Equipment....      135,638,375    (3.7%)                                                 61,141,725   (2.1%)
 Electronics.............      311,786,331    (8.6%)                                                139,112,337   (4.8%)
 Entertainment & Leisure.       69,260,925    (1.9%)                                                 31,127,400   (1.1%)
 Financial Services......      207,714,472    (5.7%)                                                 93,083,836   (3.2%)
 Food & Beverages........       68,059,775    (1.9%)                                                 30,438,238   (1.1%)
 Household Products......      115,271,300    (3.2%)                                                 52,737,925   (1.8%)
 Insurance...............      122,153,209    (3.4%)                                                 55,087,431   (1.9%)
 Liquor..................       35,878,100    (1.0%)                                                 16,110,094   (0.6%)
 Medical Equipment &
  Supply.................       64,919,375    (1.8%)                                                 29,183,519   (1.0%)
 Multi-Industry..........      157,590,888    (4.3%)                                                 70,569,787   (2.5%)
 Office & Business
  Equipment..............      100,591,019    (2.8%)                                                 45,145,450   (1.6%)
 Oil.....................       78,019,820    (2.1%)                                                 34,877,416   (1.2%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration...       10,186,600    (0.3%)                                                  4,492,675   (0.2%)
 Oil-International.......      148,770,011    (4.1%)                                                 66,566,008   (2.3%)
 Retail Trade............      230,490,362    (6.4%)                                                103,622,031   (3.6%)
 Software................      220,768,794    (6.1%)                                                 99,297,338   (3.5%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services...      166,601,284    (4.6%)                                                 74,851,353   (2.6%)
 Transportation-Trucking.                                                                                     5   (0.0%)
 Utilities-Electric......       29,997,175    (0.8%)                                                 13,395,200   (0.5%)
 Utilities-Gas &
  Pipelines..............       38,584,063    (1.1%)                                                 17,426,063   (0.6%)
 Utilities-Telephone.....      103,491,375    (2.9%)                                                 46,478,737   (1.6%)
                            --------------                                                       --------------
 Total Common Stock......    3,536,573,498   (97.6%)                                              1,588,812,718  (55.3%)
                            --------------                                                       --------------
 LONG-TERM DEBT
  SECURITIES
 Corporate Bonds:
 Aerospace & Defense.....                            $  3,129,248   (0.7%)                            8,007,919   (0.3%)
 Asset Backed............                              13,145,137   (2.7%)                           16,750,976   (0.6%)
 Automotive..............                               7,115,862   (1.5%)                           14,621,369   (0.5%)
 Banking.................                               5,120,913   (1.1%)
 Collateralized Mortgage
  Obligations............                              23,320,293   (4.9%)                           45,392,738   (1.6%)
 Drugs & Health Care.....                               2,903,965   (0.6%)                            6,368,139   (0.2%)
 Electrical Equipment....                                                                             5,032,173   (0.2%)
 Entertainment & Leisure.                                                                             4,307,188   (0.2%)
 Finance & Banking.......                              19,467,181   (4.1%)                           90,280,549   (3.1%)
 Financial Services......                             120,137,416  (25.1%)                          305,430,425  (10.6%)
 Food & Beverages........                               9,895,519   (2.1%)                           12,511,591   (0.4%)
 Healthcare Services.....                              13,325,625   (2.8%)                           28,557,900   (1.0%)
 Industrials.............                              13,357,360   (2.8%)                           58,750,359   (2.0%)
 Mortgage Related........                              11,533,851   (2.4%)                           31,552,849   (1.1%)
 Newspapers..............                               9,744,055   (2.0%)                           20,468,019   (0.7%)
 Pollution Control.......                               1,760,000   (0.4%)                           19,866,031   (0.7%)
 Restaurant..............                               3,089,555   (0.6%)                            3,884,012   (0.1%)
 Retail Grocery..........                               7,162,867   (1.5%)                           20,183,815   (0.7%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services...                              14,952,575   (3.1%)                           36,301,441   (1.3%)
 Utilities-Electric......                              23,188,403   (4.9%)                           35,847,072   (1.3%)
 Utilities-Gas &
  Pipelines..............                               2,508,129   (0.5%)                            6,344,091   (0.2%)
                                                     ------------                                --------------
 Total Corporate Bonds...                             304,857,954  (63.8%)                          770,458,656  (26.8%)
                                                     ------------                                --------------
 Federal Agency
  Obligations............                              33,244,644   (6.9%)                           64,815,085   (2.3%)
 Federal Treasury
  Obligations............                              69,212,535  (14.5%)                          254,049,569   (8.8%)
 Foreign Obligations.....                               9,200,344   (1.9%)                           23,045,630   (0.8%)
 State Agency
  Obligations............                              19,552,778   (4.1%)                           46,617,831   (1.6%)
 Yankee Bonds............                              26,698,901   (5.6%)                           63,191,720   (2.2%)
                                                     ------------                                --------------
 Total Long-Term Debt
  Securities.............                             462,767,156  (96.8%)                        1,222,178,491  (42.5%)
                                                     ------------                                --------------
 SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Bankers' Acceptances....                                                  $ 2,296,541    (4.5%)
 Commercial Paper........      104,406,562    (2.9%)    4,153,120   (0.9%)  46,206,089   (89.6%)     40,162,565   (1.4%)
 Foreign Obligations.....                                                    2,527,260    (4.9%)
 Repurchase Agreements...          906,000    (0.0%)
                            --------------           ------------          -----------           --------------
 Total Short-Term
  Obligations............      105,312,562    (2.9%)    4,153,120   (0.9%)  51,029,890   (99.0%)     40,162,565   (1.4%)
                            --------------           ------------          -----------           --------------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS.......    3,641,886,060  (100.5%)  466,920,276  (97.7%)  51,029,890   (99.0%)  2,851,153,774  (99.2%)
 Other Assets Less
  Liabilities............      (18,570,414)  (-0.5%)   10,959,423   (2.3%)     515,101    (1.0%)     23,257,871   (0.8%)
                            --------------           ------------          -----------           --------------
 NET ASSETS..............   $3,623,315,646  (100.0%) $477,879,699 (100.0%) $51,544,991  (100.0%) $2,874,411,645 (100.0%)
                            ==============           ============          ===========           ==============
</TABLE>


                                      18
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  State Street
                                                    Research              Santander
                            MetLife                Aggressive           International
                          Stock Index                Growth                 Stock
                           Portfolio               Portfolio              Portfolio
                         --------------          --------------         -------------
                             Value                   Value                  Value
                           (Note 2A)               (Note 2A)              (Note 2A)
<S>                      <C>            <C>      <C>            <C>     <C>           <C>
COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense.... $   42,520,747   (1.0%)
 Automotive.............     53,473,320   (1.3%) $   24,293,875  (1.5%) $  12,765,921  (4.0%)
 Banking................    222,504,127   (5.3%)     11,599,213  (0.7%)    35,345,047 (11.1%)
 Biotechnology..........      4,259,062   (0.1%)     24,580,406  (1.5%)
 Broadcasting...........    102,304,763   (2.4%)    113,538,148  (7.1%)
 Building &
  Construction..........     12,908,642   (0.3%)                            1,129,927  (0.4%)
 Business Services......     52,283,928   (1.2%)    128,551,113  (8.0%)     6,578,957  (2.1%)
 Chemicals..............     66,926,188   (1.6%)      5,668,625  (0.4%)    14,809,559  (4.7%)
 Computer Equipment &
  Service...............    344,503,286   (8.2%)    176,966,356 (11.1%)
 Construction Materials.      1,347,336   (0.0%)                            4,145,142  (1.3%)
 Consumer Products......      1,541,270   (0.0%)     15,105,475  (0.9%)     2,347,558  (0.7%)
 Consumer Services......      1,546,791   (0.0%)     22,926,075  (1.4%)
 Containers & Glass.....      4,748,324   (0.1%)                            1,276,864  (0.4%)
 Cosmetics..............      4,566,110   (0.1%)
 Drugs & Health Care....    269,559,821   (6.4%)     33,934,131  (2.1%)    15,475,094  (4.9%)
 Electrical Equipment...    198,603,236   (4.7%)     11,781,000  (0.7%)    11,051,542  (3.5%)
 Electronics............    290,979,817   (6.9%)    205,642,403 (12.8%)    27,888,740  (8.8%)
 Entertainment &
  Leisure...............     31,589,263   (0.8%)     55,319,769  (3.5%)
 Financial Services.....    211,099,391   (5.0%)     15,565,562  (1.0%)    22,770,469  (7.2%)
 Food & Beverages.......    144,392,638   (3.4%)
 Forest Products &
  Paper.................     38,649,761   (0.9%)
 Healthcare Services....        540,800   (0.0%)
 Homebuilders...........      1,209,419   (0.0%)                            2,861,065  (0.9%)
 Hospital Management....     11,657,934   (0.3%)
 Hotel & Motel..........      6,028,073   (0.1%)     11,613,994  (0.7%)
 Household Appliances &
  Home Furnishings......      4,477,880   (0.1%)                           10,469,911  (3.3%)
 Household Products.....     95,206,866   (2.3%)
 Industrial Components &
  Material..............        190,650   (0.0%)                            4,141,955  (1.3%)
 Insurance..............    123,792,495   (3.0%)                            9,968,500  (3.1%)
 Liquor.................      6,651,963   (0.2%)
 Machinery..............     24,637,034   (0.6%)                            4,784,205  (1.5%)
 Medical Equipment &
  Supply................     98,448,956   (2.3%)     15,930,200  (1.0%)     1,710,480  (0.5%)
 Metals-Aluminum........     15,170,831   (0.4%)
 Metals-Gold............      5,671,760   (0.1%)
 Metals-Non-Ferrous.....      2,318,173   (0.1%)                            3,141,599  (1.0%)
 Metals-Steel & Iron....      4,254,478   (0.1%)                           10,929,924  (3.4%)
 Mining.................      3,046,177   (0.1%)
 Miscellaneous..........      4,915,428   (0.1%)                            4,099,931  (1.3%)
 Multi-Industry.........     53,514,408   (1.3%)                            9,173,529  (2.9%)
 Newspapers.............     20,296,141   (0.5%)
 Office & Business
  Equipment.............    192,540,031   (4.6%)     43,779,375  (2.7%)     2,382,141  (0.8%)
 Oil....................                                                    3,253,848  (1.0%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration..      4,313,126   (0.1%)                            2,903,201  (0.9%)
 Oil-Domestic...........     26,869,426   (0.6%)
 Oil-Equipment &
  Services..............     26,067,054   (0.6%)     10,873,000  (0.7%)     3,294,267  (1.0%)
 Oil-International......    174,437,716   (4.2%)                            6,183,861  (1.9%)
 Packaging..............        618,375   (0.0%)
 Personal Care..........                                                    1,790,854  (0.6%)
 Photography............      7,423,620   (0.2%)                            3,030,146  (1.0%)
 Plastics...............                                                    1,642,705  (0.5%)
 Pollution Control......      4,170,830   (0.1%)
 Printing & Publishing..      8,326,516   (0.2%)     21,786,212  (1.4%)     1,419,888  (0.4%)
 Real Estate............                                                    4,807,378  (1.5%)
 Restaurant.............     22,291,487   (0.5%)
 Retail Grocery.........     17,788,649   (0.4%)                            1,661,126  (0.5%)
 Retail Trade...........    258,726,495   (6.2%)    176,908,418 (11.1%)    12,081,931  (3.8%)
 Software...............    306,073,513   (7.3%)    118,954,841  (7.4%)
 Technology.............                             19,159,525  (1.2%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services..    121,104,733   (2.9%)    154,558,970  (9.7%)    11,386,247  (3.6%)
 Textiles & Apparel.....      7,270,147   (0.2%)      8,983,463  (0.6%)
 Tires & Rubber.........      2,933,650   (0.1%)                            1,029,788  (0.3%)
 Tobacco................     20,221,865   (0.5%)                            7,882,048  (2.5%)
 Toys & Amusements......      3,146,864   (0.1%)                              814,349  (0.3%)
 Transportation-
  Airlines..............      9,225,687   (0.2%)                            7,301,153  (2.3%)
 Transportation-
  Miscellaneous.........                                                    3,557,910  (1.1%)
 Transportation-
  Railroad..............     15,390,852   (0.4%)
 Transportation-
  Trucking..............        525,406   (0.0%)
 Utilities-Electric.....     67,540,874   (1.6%)      9,663,975  (0.6%)
 Utilities-Gas &
  Pipelines.............     21,701,498   (0.5%)     13,129,119  (0.8%)     1,526,783  (0.5%)
 Utilities-
  Miscellaneous.........      1,420,319   (0.0%)
 Utilities-Telephone....    306,347,545   (7.3%)     16,136,400  (1.0%)    15,549,318  (4.9%)
                         --------------          --------------         -------------
 Total Common Stock.....  4,208,813,565 (100.1%)  1,466,949,643 (91.6%)   310,364,861 (97.7%)
                         --------------          --------------         -------------
</TABLE>

                                       19
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   State Street
                                                     Research                Santander
                            MetLife                 Aggressive             International
                          Stock Index                 Growth                   Stock
                           Portfolio                Portfolio                Portfolio
                          (continued)              (continued)              (continued)
                         --------------           --------------           -------------
                             Value                    Value                    Value
                           (Note 2A)                (Note 2A)                (Note 2A)
<S>                      <C>             <C>      <C>             <C>      <C>           <C>
PREFERRED STOCK
 Banking................                                                      2,290,901    (0.7%)
 Retail Trade...........                                                        309,734    (0.1%)
                                                                           ------------
 Total Preferred Stock..                                                      2,600,635    (0.8%)
                                                                           ------------
LONG-TERM DEBT
 SECURITIES
 Foreign Obligations....                                                        158,596    (0.0%)
SHORT TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Commercial Paper.......                             154,949,235    (9.7%)
 Repurchase Agreements..                                                      4,097,000    (1.3%)
 Federal Agency
  Obligations...........      1,206,498    (0.0%)
                         --------------           --------------           ------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS.......  4,210,020,063  (100.1%)  1,621,898,878  (101.3%)  317,221,092   (99.8%)
Other Assets Less
 Liabilities............     (4,818,376)  (-0.1%)    (21,058,178)  (-1.3%)      609,779    (0.2%)
                         --------------           --------------           ------------
NET ASSETS.............. $4,205,201,687  (100.0%) $1,600,840,700  (100.0%) $317,830,871  (100.0%)
                         ==============           ==============           ============
</TABLE>

                                       20
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         Loomis Sayles
                                                           High Yield
                                                         Bond Portfolio
                                                         --------------
                                                             Value
                                                           (Note 2A)
 <S>                                                     <C>            <C>
 COMMON STOCK
 Banking...............................................   $     3,252     (0.0%)
 Forest Products & Paper...............................     1,625,767     (2.7%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration.................................       141,728     (0.2%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services..............................        56,250     (0.1%)
 Real Estate...........................................       239,906     (0.4%)
 Restaurant............................................         3,479     (0.0%)
 Utilities-Electric....................................        20,632     (0.0%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Common Stock....................................     2,091,014     (3.4%)
                                                          -----------
 PREFERRED STOCK
 Banking...............................................         8,549     (0.0%)
 Construction Materials................................       129,844     (0.2%)
 Food & Beverages......................................        29,250     (0.0%)
 Metals-Steel & Iron...................................       182,000     (0.3%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration.................................       267,750     (0.4%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services..............................       281,685     (0.5%)
 Real Estate...........................................       175,650     (0.3%)
 Telecommunications Equipment & Services...............     1,400,884     (2.3%)
 Transportation-Shipping...............................        12,000     (0.0%)
 Utilities-Electric....................................       300,459     (0.5%)
 Utilities-Telephone...................................       214,312     (0.4%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Preferred Stock.................................     3,002,383     (4.9%)
                                                          -----------
 LONG-TERM DEBT SECURITIES
 Convertible Bonds
 Automotive............................................       380,625     (0.6%)
 Building & Construction...............................        81,500     (0.1%)
 Computer Equipment & Service..........................     3,458,197     (5.6%)
 Drugs & Health Care...................................     1,967,862     (3.2%)
 Electronics...........................................     1,882,512     (3.1%)
 Entertainment & Leisure...............................       237,480     (0.4%)
 Foreign Obligations...................................     5,617,845     (9.1%)
 Healthcare Services...................................       297,375     (0.5%)
 Industrial Components & Material......................       364,625     (0.6%)
 Industrials...........................................       692,775     (1.1%)
 Medical Equipment & Supply............................       208,050     (0.3%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration.................................       150,000     (0.2%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services..............................     1,094,043     (1.8%)
 Pollution Control.....................................       123,188     (0.2%)
 Real Estate...........................................        91,000     (0.2%)
 Restaurant............................................       357,360     (0.6%)
 Retail Trade..........................................        68,563     (0.1%)
 Telecommunications Equipment & Services...............       442,500     (0.7%)
 Transportation-Trucking...............................       129,600     (0.2%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Convertible Bonds...............................    17,645,100    (28.6%)
                                                          -----------
 Corporate Bonds
 Broadcasting..........................................     1,687,875     (2.7%)
 Chemicals.............................................       292,740     (0.5%)
 Computer Equipment & Service..........................       627,120     (1.0%)
 Food & Beverages......................................        76,402     (0.1%)
 Healthcare Services...................................       976,095     (1.6%)
 Industrials...........................................       912,871     (1.5%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration.................................       988,687     (1.6%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services..............................     3,231,875     (5.2%)
 Real Estate...........................................       409,937     (0.7%)
 Retail Trade..........................................       452,163     (0.7%)
 Telecommunications Equipment & Services...............     5,659,875     (9.2%)
 Textiles & Apparel....................................       333,506     (0.6%)
 Transportation........................................       261,563     (0.4%)
 Transportation-Shipping...............................       626,800     (1.0%)
 Utilities-Electric....................................       705,750     (1.2%)
 Utilities-Telephone...................................       493,000     (0.8%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Corporate Bonds.................................    17,736,259    (28.8%)
                                                          -----------
 Foreign Obligations...................................    11,987,615    (19.4%)
 Yankee Bonds..........................................     6,418,660    (10.4%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Long-Term Debt Securities.......................    53,787,634    (87.2%)
                                                          -----------
 SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Repurchase Agreements.................................       884,000     (1.4%)
                                                          -----------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS.....................................    59,765,031    (96.9%)
 Other Assets Less Liabilities.........................     1,936,338     (3.1%)
                                                          -----------
 NET ASSETS............................................   $61,701,369   (100.0%)
                                                          ===========
</TABLE>

                                       21
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  T. Rowe Price
                             Janus                  Small Cap                Scudder
                            Mid Cap                  Growth               Global Equity
                           Portfolio                Portfolio               Portfolio
                         --------------           -------------           -------------
                             Value                    Value                   Value
                           (Note 2A)                (Note 2A)               (Note 2A)
<S>                      <C>             <C>      <C>            <C>      <C>           <C>
COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense....                          $  1,025,437     (0.4%) $  2,654,542    (1.5%)
 Automotive.............                             2,668,712     (1.0%)      389,527    (0.2%)
 Banking................                             2,779,701     (1.0%)    6,374,730    (3.7%)
 Biotechnology.......... $   42,717,280    (2.2%)    1,622,128     (0.6%)    3,766,838    (2.2%)
 Broadcasting...........    182,450,383    (9.4%)    9,202,244     (3.4%)    4,670,099    (2.7%)
 Building &
  Construction..........                             1,147,375     (0.4%)      514,750    (0.3%)
 Business Services......    152,634,350    (7.9%)   23,868,284     (8.9%)    2,358,915    (1.4%)
 Chemicals..............                             3,291,533     (1.2%)   10,906,382    (6.4%)
 Computer Equipment &
  Service...............    419,901,193   (21.7%)   24,709,494     (9.2%)    3,283,932    (1.9%)
 Construction & Mining
  Equipment.............                               727,050     (0.3%)
 Construction Materials.                               678,125     (0.3%)    2,484,832    (1.5%)
 Consumer Products......                               398,263     (0.1%)
 Drugs & Health Care....     51,178,119    (2.6%)   16,126,810     (6.0%)    5,494,040    (3.2%)
 Education..............     34,102,280    (1.8%)    3,104,162     (1.2%)
 Electrical Equipment...                             5,424,125     (2.0%)    5,874,457    (3.4%)
 Electronics............    255,169,133   (13.2%)   39,158,644    (14.5%)   13,213,361    (7.7%)
 Entertainment &
  Leisure...............     49,936,749    (2.6%)    5,588,944     (2.1%)
 Financial Services.....                             6,797,057     (2.5%)    5,079,216    (3.0%)
 Food & Beverages.......                             1,538,278     (0.6%)
 Forest Products &
  Paper.................                                                       963,375    (0.6%)
 Healthcare Services....     14,559,746    (0.8%)      702,625     (0.3%)      568,269    (0.3%)
 Hospital Management....                               500,656     (0.2%)
 Household Appliances &
  Home Furnishings......                                                     1,246,452    (0.7%)
 Industrial Components &
  Material..............                               856,794     (0.3%)
 Insurance..............                             2,260,759     (0.8%)    4,670,482    (2.7%)
 Lease Rental
  Obligations...........                             1,193,456     (0.4%)
 Machinery..............                                                       151,599    (0.1%)
 Medical Equipment &
  Supply................     14,836,617    (0.8%)    6,020,644     (2.2%)
 Metals-Gold............                                                     4,072,604    (2.4%)
 Metals-Non-Ferrous.....                                                     4,677,775    (2.7%)
 Metals-Steel & Iron....                                                     6,605,028    (3.9%)
 Mining.................                                                     1,744,481    (1.0%)
 Miscellaneous..........                               275,600     (0.1%)
 Multi-Industry.........                                                     2,482,024    (1.4%)
 Newspapers.............                               854,775     (0.3%)
 Office & Business
  Equipment.............                             4,939,347     (1.8%)    5,639,675    (3.3%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration..                               932,512     (0.3%)      683,750    (0.4%)
 Oil-Domestic...........                                                     3,765,288    (2.2%)
 Oil-Equipment &
  Services..............                             2,943,681     (1.1%)    1,531,040    (0.9%)
 Oil-International......                                                     3,368,984    (2.0%)
 Photography............                             1,244,309     (0.5%)
 Pollution Control......                               969,891     (0.4%)
 Real Estate............                             2,692,804     (1.0%)    2,179,844    (1.3%)
 Restaurant.............      1,091,461    (0.1%)    4,051,256     (1.5%)
 Retail Grocery.........                             1,830,483     (0.7%)
 Retail Trade...........     13,244,333    (0.7%)   13,945,028     (5.2%)    1,396,008    (0.8%)
 Software...............    124,501,640    (6.4%)   31,128,170    (11.5%)    7,143,207    (4.2%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services..    473,207,570   (24.5%)   23,235,061     (8.6%)   12,333,669    (7.2%)
 Textiles & Apparel.....                             2,968,687     (1.1%)      575,629    (0.3%)
 Tobacco................                                                       212,694    (0.1%)
 Toys & Amusements......                               478,400     (0.2%)
 Transportation-
  Airlines..............                             1,232,378     (0.5%)    2,112,781    (1.2%)
 Transportation-
  Railroad..............                               824,988     (0.3%)    5,090,951    (3.0%)
 Transportation-
  Trucking..............                               940,175     (0.3%)
 Utilities-Electric.....                                                     7,734,478    (4.5%)
 Utilities-Gas &
  Pipelines.............                                                     1,606,375    (0.9%)
 Utilities-Telephone....     91,101,795    (4.7%)    1,916,966     (0.7%)    8,137,388    (4.7%)
                         --------------           ------------            ------------
 Total Common Stock.....  1,920,632,649   (99.4%)  258,795,811    (96.0%)  157,759,471   (91.9%)
                         --------------           ------------            ------------
SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Commercial Paper.......     44,688,825    (2.3%)
 Foreign Obligations....                                                     5,218,413    (3.0%)
 Repurchase Agreements..      1,914,000    (0.1%)                            6,468,000    (3.8%)
                         --------------                                   ------------
 Total Short-Term
  Obligations...........     46,602,825    (2.4%)                           11,686,413    (6.8%)
                         --------------                                   ------------
LONG-TERM DEBT
 SECURITIES
 Participating Loan
  Notes.................                                                       420,065    (0.2%)
 Federal Treasury
  Obligations...........                               195,140     (0.1%)
SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Regulated Investment
  Companies.............                            12,572,104     (4.7%)
                         --------------           ------------            ------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS.......  1,967,235,474  (101.8%)  271,563,055   (100.8%)  169,865,949   (98.9%)
Other Assets Less
 Liabilities............    (35,438,420)  (-1.8%)   (2,045,413)   (-0.8%)    1,848,472    (1.1%)
                         --------------           ------------            ------------
NET ASSETS.............. $1,931,797,054  (100.0%) $269,517,642   (100.0%) $171,714,421  (100.0%)
                         ==============           ============            ============
</TABLE>

                                       22
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        Morgan Stanley
                                  Russell 2000               EAFE
                                 Index Portfolio        Index Portfolio
                                 ---------------        ---------------
                                      Value                  Value
                                    (Note 2A)              (Note 2A)
 <S>                             <C>             <C>    <C>             <C>
 COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense...........     $ 678,269    (0.6%)    $ 193,539     (0.2%)
 Agriculture & Related.........        69,500    (0.1%)
 Automotive....................     1,110,278    (1.0%)    3,241,751     (3.9%)
 Banking.......................     7,243,688    (6.5%)    8,729,364    (10.6%)
 Biotechnology.................     2,144,522    (1.9%)      193,965     (0.2%)
 Broadcasting..................     1,513,037    (1.4%)      951,178     (1.2%)
 Building & Construction.......       602,606    (0.5%)      444,750     (0.5%)
 Business Services.............     7,088,385    (6.4%)    1,208,099     (1.5%)
 Chemicals.....................     1,803,803    (1.6%)    1,933,527     (2.4%)
 Coal..........................        30,375    (0.0%)
 Computer Equipment & Service..     8,906,921    (8.0%)    1,885,797     (2.3%)
 Construction & Mining
  Equipment....................       264,722    (0.2%)       37,709     (0.0%)
 Construction Materials........       695,375    (0.6%)      920,852     (1.1%)
 Consumer Products.............       329,088    (0.3%)      426,599     (0.5%)
 Consumer Services.............        41,388    (0.0%)      103,263     (0.1%)
 Containers & Glass............       313,969    (0.3%)      145,958     (0.2%)
 Cosmetics.....................                               43,751     (0.1%)
 Drugs & Health Care...........     5,063,950    (4.5%)    4,831,395     (5.9%)
 Education.....................       159,694    (0.1%)
 Electrical Equipment..........     2,139,364    (1.9%)    2,346,494     (2.9%)
 Electronics...................     8,542,542    (7.7%)    6,444,858     (7.8%)
 Entertainment & Leisure.......     1,726,211    (1.6%)      401,596     (0.5%)
 Financial Services............     2,146,995    (1.9%)    3,529,550     (4.3%)
 Food & Beverages..............     1,575,037    (1.4%)    2,170,309     (2.6%)
 Forest Products & Paper.......       919,925    (0.8%)      448,821     (0.5%)
 Healthcare Services...........       914,353    (0.8%)       21,577     (0.0%)
 Homebuilders..................       526,462    (0.5%)      135,410     (0.2%)
 Hospital Management...........       344,369    (0.3%)
 Hotel & Motel.................       454,447    (0.4%)      209,742     (0.3%)
 Household Appliances & Home
  Furnishings..................       735,853    (0.7%)      554,907     (0.7%)
 Household Products............       307,909    (0.3%)       23,221     (0.0%)
 Industrial Components &
  Material.....................     1,976,599    (1.8%)      443,963     (0.5%)
 Industrial
  Development / Pollution
  Bonds........................                               70,720     (0.1%)
 Insurance.....................     3,360,032    (3.0%)    4,037,027     (4.9%)
 Investment Companies..........        38,106    (0.0%)
 Lease Rental Obligations......       436,903    (0.4%)        6,440     (0.0%)
 Liquor........................       205,856    (0.2%)      628,678     (0.8%)
 Machinery.....................     1,854,774    (1.7%)      937,355     (1.1%)
 Medical Equipment & Supply....     2,052,444    (1.8%)      160,632     (0.2%)
 Metals-Aluminum...............        56,888    (0.1%)       27,558     (0.0%)
 Metals-Gold...................        27,638    (0.0%)       17,957     (0.0%)
 Metals-Non-Ferrous............       148,431    (0.1%)      243,787     (0.3%)
 Metals-Steel & Iron...........       794,678    (0.7%)      714,613     (0.9%)
 Mining........................       148,944    (0.1%)       51,399     (0.1%)
 Miscellaneous.................       513,562    (0.5%)       92,534     (0.1%)
 Mobile Homes..................       198,119    (0.2%)
 Multi-Industry................       902,396    (0.8%)    4,241,874     (5.2%)
 Newspapers....................       146,913    (0.1%)        5,582     (0.0%)
 Office & Business Equipment...     1,049,025    (0.9%)      444,459     (0.5%)
 Oil...........................       245,419    (0.2%)    1,824,272     (2.2%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration.........     1,377,606    (1.2%)       74,383     (0.1%)
 Oil-Domestic..................                                7,204     (0.0%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services......     1,199,770    (1.1%)      970,166     (1.2%)
 Oil-International.............                            1,486,992     (1.8%)
</TABLE>

                                       23
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        Morgan Stanley
                                Russell 2000                 EAFE
                               Index Portfolio          Index Portfolio
                                 (continued)              (continued)
                               ---------------          ---------------
                                    Value                    Value
                                  (Note 2A)                (Note 2A)
 <S>                           <C>             <C>      <C>             <C>
 COMMON STOCK--(Continued)
 Packaging..................          95,138     (0.1%)
 Personal Care..............          51,100     (0.1%)       512,187     (0.6%)
 Photography................         308,944     (0.3%)       146,031     (0.2%)
 Plastics...................         136,109     (0.1%)        55,133     (0.1%)
 Pollution Control..........         170,117     (0.2%)         8,788     (0.0%)
 Printing & Publishing......         681,175     (0.6%)       579,027     (0.7%)
 Real Estate................       4,853,008     (4.4%)     1,113,230     (1.4%)
 Restaurant.................         905,844     (0.8%)        63,682     (0.1%)
 Retail Grocery.............         358,198     (0.3%)       678,318     (0.8%)
 Retail Trade...............       3,602,791     (3.2%)     2,263,892     (2.8%)
 Shipbuilding...............         107,250     (0.1%)         6,851     (0.0%)
 Software...................       9,163,883     (8.2%)       528,209     (0.6%)
 Technology.................       1,124,335     (1.0%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services......       7,256,975     (6.5%)     5,713,882     (6.9%)
 Textiles & Apparel.........         994,724     (0.9%)       268,027     (0.3%)
 Tires & Rubber.............          47,500     (0.0%)       246,555     (0.3%)
 Tobacco....................         142,120     (0.1%)       298,673     (0.4%)
 Toys & Amusements..........          36,441     (0.0%)       182,813     (0.2%)
 Transportation.............         195,463     (0.2%)       207,016     (0.3%)
 Transportation-Airlines....         821,011     (0.7%)       431,963     (0.5%)
 Transportation-
  Miscellaneous.............                                   22,388     (0.0%)
 Transportation-Railroad....         462,959     (0.4%)       551,262     (0.7%)
 Transportation-Shipping....         201,838     (0.2%)       399,092     (0.5%)
 Transportation-Trucking....         698,687     (0.6%)         9,013     (0.0%)
 Utilities..................         367,963     (0.3%)
 Utilities-Electric.........       1,548,840     (1.4%)     1,998,232     (2.4%)
 Utilities-Gas & Pipelines..       2,091,713     (1.9%)       462,574     (0.6%)
 Utilities-Miscellaneous....                                  109,089     (0.1%)
 Utilities-Telephone........         310,884     (0.3%)     6,851,920     (8.3%)
 Utilities-Water............         116,150     (0.1%)
                                ------------              -----------
 Total Common Stock.........     111,978,300   (100.2%)    81,773,424    (99.3%)
                                ------------              -----------
 PREFERRED STOCK
 Automotive.................                                   22,424     (0.0%)
 Broadcasting...............                                  152,498     (0.2%)
 Building & Construction....                                    9,187     (0.0%)
 Oil-Equipment & Services...                                    8,865     (0.0%)
 Oil-International..........                                   15,413     (0.0%)
 Retail Grocery.............                                    7,711     (0.0%)
 Retail Trade...............                                    9,096     (0.0%)
 Software...................                                  210,838     (0.3%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Preferred Stock......                                  436,032     (0.5%)
                                                          -----------
 SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Federal Agency Obligations.         996,977     (0.9%)     1,042,652     (1.3%)
                                ------------              -----------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS..........     112,975,277   (101.1%)    83,252,108   (101.1%)
 Other Assets Less
  Liabilities...............      (1,246,645)   (-1.1%)      (897,193)   (-1.1%)
                                ------------              -----------
 NET ASSETS.................    $111,728,632   (100.0%)   $82,354,915   (100.0%)
                                ============              ===========
</TABLE>

                                       24
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              Lehman
                                                             Brothers
                                                            Aggregate
                                                            Bond Index
                                                            Portfolio
                                                           ------------
                                                              Value
                                                            (Note 2A)
<S>                                                        <C>          <C>
LONG-TERM DEBT SECURITIES
Corporate Bonds:
 Aerospace & Defense...................................... $    217,373   (0.2%)
 Asset Backed.............................................    1,114,534   (0.9%)
 Automotive...............................................      656,234   (0.5%)
 Banking..................................................    2,646,073   (2.0%)
 Broadcasting.............................................      459,729   (0.4%)
 Collateralized Mortgage Obligations......................    1,557,920   (1.2%)
 Drugs & Health Care......................................      137,862   (0.1%)
 Entertainment & Leisure..................................      447,900   (0.3%)
 Finance & Banking........................................    1,184,489   (0.9%)
 Financial Services.......................................    5,417,318   (4.2%)
 Food & Beverages.........................................      198,824   (0.2%)
 Forest Products & Paper..................................      902,049   (0.7%)
 Industrials..............................................      138,134   (0.1%)
 Liquor...................................................      468,535   (0.4%)
 Multi-Industry...........................................      712,878   (0.5%)
 Office & Business Equipment..............................      465,375   (0.4%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration....................................      572,352   (0.4%)
 Printing & Publishing....................................      457,777   (0.3%)
 Real Estate..............................................      502,193   (0.4%)
 Restaurant...............................................      457,986   (0.4%)
 Retail Trade.............................................    1,152,172   (0.9%)
 Telecommunications Equipment & Services..................    1,447,723   (1.1%)
 Transportation-Airlines..................................      825,882   (0.6%)
 Transportation-Railroad..................................      300,801   (0.2%)
 Utilities-Electric.......................................    1,364,726   (1.1%)
 Utilities-Gas & Pipelines................................      723,618   (0.6%)
 Utilities-Telephone......................................    1,420,791   (1.1%)
                                                           ------------
 Total Corporate Bonds....................................   25,951,248  (20.1%)
                                                           ------------
 Federal Agency Obligations...............................   57,027,167  (44.1%)
 Federal Treasury Obligations.............................   35,460,210  (27.4%)
 State Agency Obligations.................................      182,909   (0.1%)
 Yankee Bonds.............................................    2,257,967   (1.7%)
                                                           ------------
 Total Bonds..............................................  120,879,501  (93.4%)
                                                           ------------
SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Commercial Paper.........................................    4,535,468   (3.5%)
 Federal Agency Obligations...............................      595,728   (0.5%)
                                                           ------------
 Total Short-Term Obligations.............................    5,131,196   (4.0%)
                                                           ------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS.........................................  126,010,697  (97.4%)
Other Assets Less Liabilities.............................    3,327,963   (2.6%)
                                                           ------------
NET ASSETS................................................ $129,338,660 (100.0%)
                                                           ============
</TABLE>

                                       25
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                         Metropolitan Series Fund, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          Harris Oakmark              Neuberger Berman              T. Rowe Price
                          Large Cap Value          Partners Mid Cap Value             Large Cap
                             Portfolio                   Portfolio                 Growth Portfolio
                          ---------------          ----------------------          ----------------
                               Value                       Value                        Value
                             (Note 2A)                   (Note 2A)                    (Note 2A)
<S>                       <C>             <C>      <C>                    <C>      <C>              <C>
COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense....    $ 3,218,687     (8.4%)      $   822,900         (2.1%)
 Automotive.............                                  1,947,912         (5.0%)   $   260,550      (0.5%)
 Banking................      3,446,094     (9.0%)          851,525         (2.2%)     1,887,612      (3.7%)
 Biotechnology..........                                                                 431,081      (0.8%)
 Broadcasting...........                                  1,537,144         (4.0%)     2,779,959      (5.4%)
 Building &
  Construction..........        813,375     (2.1%)                                       246,138      (0.5%)
 Business Services......      3,166,562     (8.3%)        1,177,100         (3.0%)     2,216,848      (4.3%)
 Chemicals..............      1,192,344     (3.1%)        1,938,494         (5.0%)
 Computer Equipment &
  Service...............        972,969     (2.5%)        1,436,228         (3.7%)     4,917,202      (9.6%)
 Consumer Products......      2,168,375     (5.7%)
 Containers & Glass.....                                    191,706         (0.5%)
 Drugs & Health Care....                                    727,988         (1.9%)     3,374,794      (6.6%)
 Electrical Equipment...                                    439,875         (1.1%)     1,288,125      (2.5%)
 Electronics............      1,815,625     (4.7%)          792,706         (2.1%)     4,235,797      (8.2%)
 Entertainment &
  Leisure...............      1,735,500     (4.5%)          481,500         (1.2%)        87,750      (0.2%)
 Financial Services.....                                  1,618,975         (4.2%)     4,435,533      (8.6%)
 Food & Beverages.......                                                                 341,925      (0.7%)
 Forest Products &
  Paper.................        821,250     (2.1%)        1,103,437         (2.9%)       234,900      (0.5%)
 Hospital Management....                                                                 398,438      (0.8%)
 Hotel & Motel..........                                    368,950         (1.0%)       361,213      (0.7%)
 Household Appliances &
  Home Furnishings......                                    739,200         (1.9%)
 Household Products.....                                                                 922,387      (1.8%)
 Industrials............                                    201,400         (0.5%)       174,900      (0.3%)
 Insurance..............        878,813     (2.3%)        1,890,531         (4.9%)     1,188,617      (2.3%)
 Machinery..............      1,577,063     (4.1%)        1,209,506         (3.1%)
 Medical Equipment &
  Supply................                                  1,241,094         (3.2%)     1,205,187      (2.3%)
 Metals-Aluminum........                                    498,063         (1.3%)
 Metals-Non-Ferrous.....                                    434,125         (1.1%)
 Metals-Steel & Iron....                                    570,025         (1.5%)
 Mining.................                                    107,400         (0.3%)
 Miscellaneous..........      1,785,375     (4.7%)
 Multi-Industry.........                                    458,850         (1.2%)     3,303,693      (6.4%)
 Newspapers.............      1,844,500     (4.8%)                                       192,719      (0.4%)
 Office & Business
  Equipment.............                                                                 340,588      (0.7%)
 Oil....................                                    547,031         (1.4%)
 Oil & Gas Exploration..                                  1,010,250         (2.6%)
 Oil-Domestic...........                                    592,500         (1.5%)
 Oil-Equipment &
  Services..............                                  2,015,375         (5.2%)       238,006      (0.5%)
 Oil-International......                                                               1,476,969      (2.9%)
 Packaging..............                                    686,359         (1.8%)
 Printing & Publishing..      2,301,000     (6.0%)          501,500         (1.3%)       355,081      (0.7%)
 Real Estate............      1,281,250     (3.3%)          535,500         (1.4%)       205,969      (0.4%)
 Restaurant.............                                                                 169,313      (0.3%)
 Retail Grocery.........                                                                 981,221      (1.9%)
 Retail Trade...........                                    611,000         (1.6%)     2,590,426      (5.0%)
 Software...............                                  1,988,325         (5.1%)     4,157,962      (8.1%)
 Telecommunications
  Equipment & Services..                                  3,108,844         (8.0%)     2,269,381      (4.4%)
 Textiles & Apparel.....      2,081,625     (5.4%)                                       163,556      (0.3%)
 Tobacco................      1,864,275     (4.9%)                                       264,338      (0.5%)
 Toys & Amusements......      1,765,312     (4.6%)
 Transportation-
  Airlines..............                                    510,313         (1.3%)
 Transportation-
  Railroad..............                                    582,075         (1.5%)       261,188      (0.5%)
 Utilities-Electric.....                                  1,118,050         (2.9%)
 Utilities-Gas &
  Pipelines.............                                    286,663         (0.7%)
 Utilities-Telephone....                                                               2,158,184      (4.2%)
                            -----------                 -----------                  -----------
 Total Common Stock.....     34,729,994    (90.5%)       36,880,419        (95.2%)    50,117,550     (97.5%)
                            -----------                 -----------                  -----------
 SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Commercial Paper.......      1,500,000     (3.9%)
 Regulated Investment
  Companies.............                                                               1,867,428      (3.6%)
 Repurchase Agreements..      1,482,000     (3.9%)        1,854,000         (4.8%)       703,000      (1.4%)
                            -----------                 -----------                  -----------
 Total Short-Term
  Obligations...........      2,982,000     (7.8%)        1,854,000         (4.8%)     2,570,428      (5.0%)
                            -----------                 -----------                  -----------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS......     37,711,994    (98.3%)       38,734,419       (100.0%)    52,687,978    (102.5%)
 Other Assets Less
  Liabilities...........        665,535     (1.7%)          (12,430)        (0.0%)    (1,286,462)    (-2.5%)
                            -----------                 -----------                  -----------
 NET ASSETS.............    $38,377,529   (100.0%)      $38,721,989       (100.0%)   $51,401,516    (100.0%)
                            ===========                 ===========                  ===========
</TABLE>

                                       26
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                    Templeton Variable Products Series Fund

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           Templeton
                                                         International
                                                             Stock
                                                           Portfolio
                                                         --------------
                                                             Value
                                                           (Note 2A)
<S>                                                      <C>            <C>
COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense...................................  $    1,925,333   (0.2%)
 Appliances & Household Durables.......................      43,597,485   (3.8%)
 Automotive............................................      38,876,270   (3.4%)
 Banking...............................................      93,961,811   (8.1%)
 Broadcasting..........................................      11,671,882   (1.0%)
 Building Materials & Components.......................       8,232,097   (0.7%)
 Chemicals.............................................      50,382,806   (4.3%)
 Data Processing & Reproduction........................       9,436,991   (0.8%)
 Electrical & Electronics..............................      86,309,209   (7.4%)
 Energy Sources........................................      61,113,306   (5.3%)
 Financial Services....................................      67,495,324   (5.8%)
 Food & Household Products.............................      22,749,989   (2.0%)
 Forest Products & Paper...............................      21,609,388   (1.9%)
 Health & Personal Care................................      43,531,166   (3.8%)
 Industrial Components.................................       4,125,846   (0.4%)
 Insurance.............................................      63,000,165   (5.4%)
 Machinery & Engineering...............................       7,096,640   (0.6%)
 Merchandising.........................................      30,647,631   (2.6%)
 Metals & Mining.......................................      70,173,353   (6.1%)
 Multi-Industry........................................      52,379,143   (4.5%)
 Real Estate...........................................       1,704,438   (0.1%)
 Recreation & Other Consumer Goods.....................      11,067,926   (1.0%)
 Telecommunications....................................     103,119,516   (8.9%)
 Transportation........................................      51,149,658   (4.4%)
 Utilities-Gas & Pipelines.............................      87,566,150   (7.5%)
                                                         -------------- -------
 Total Common Stock....................................   1,042,923,523  (90.0%)
                                                         -------------- -------
 Preferred Stock.......................................      56,820,552   (4.9%)
 SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 Repurchase Agreements.................................      46,236,000   (4.0%)
                                                         -------------- -------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS.....................................   1,145,980,075  (98.9%)
 Other Assets Less Liabilities.........................      12,182,392   (1.1%)
                                                         -------------- -------
 NET ASSETS............................................  $1,158,162,467 (100.0%)
                                                         ============== =======
</TABLE>

                                       27
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)
                            Janus Aspen Series Fund
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         Janus Aspen
                                                       Growth Portfolio
                                                       ----------------
                                                            Value
                                                          (Note 2A)
<S>                                                    <C>              <C>
COMMON STOCK
 Audio and Video Products.............................  $   12,027,000    (0.4%)
 Automotive...........................................       1,586,454    (0.1%)
 Brewery..............................................      12,112,537    (0.4%)
 Broadcast Services and Programming...................     105,648,024    (3.5%)
 Cable Television.....................................     253,832,722    (8.5%)
 Cellular Telecommunications..........................     152,852,858    (5.1%)
 Circuits.............................................     121,198,124    (4.0%)
 Commercial Banks.....................................       8,067,519    (0.3%)
 Commercial Services..................................      30,151,000    (1.0%)
 Computer Software....................................      55,568,330    (1.9%)
 Computer Memory Devices..............................      31,415,384    (1.0%)
 Computers Micro......................................     158,170,877    (5.3%)
 Cosmetics and Toiletries.............................      11,884,925    (0.4%)
 Cruise Lines.........................................      20,701,929    (0.7%)
 Data Processing and Management.......................      37,104,521    (1.2%)
 Distribution and Wholesale...........................      24,791,256    (0.8%)
 Diversified Financial Services.......................      22,502,813    (0.7%)
 Diversified Operations...............................     165,718,684    (5.5%)
 Electronic Components................................      79,706,735    (2.7%)
 Electronic Safety Devices............................       6,334,247    (0.2%)
 Enterprise Software and Services.....................      24,758,379    (0.8%)
 Finance-Credit Card..................................      62,213,244    (2.1%)
 Finance-Investment Bankers/Brokers...................      42,087,398    (1.4%)
 Food-Wholesale.......................................       3,307,287    (0.1%)
 Identification Systems and Devices...................      11,250,562    (0.4%)
 Instruments-Scientific...............................      42,286,156    (1.4%)
 Internet Content.....................................      11,715,741    (0.4%)
 Internet Software....................................      37,657,646    (1.3%)
 Life and Health Insurance............................      72,109,337    (2.4%)
 Medical-Biomedical and Genetic.......................      46,106,600    (1.5%)
 Medical-Drugs........................................      21,339,070    (0.7%)
 Medical-Instruments..................................      10,103,026    (0.3%)
 Money Center Banks...................................      72,862,400    (2.4%)
 Multi-Line Insurance.................................      38,767,246    (1.3%)
 Multimedia...........................................     191,538,881    (6.4%)
 Networking Products..................................     117,238,564    (3.9%)
 Office Automation and Equipment......................      11,390,880    (0.4%)
 Optical Supplies.....................................      15,991,391    (0.5%)
 Pipelines............................................      72,361,869    (2.4%)
 Property and Casualty Insurance......................       7,297,509    (0.2%)
 Publishing-Newspapers................................       8,696,844    (0.3%)
 Radio................................................      27,660,475    (0.9%)
 Retail Building Products.............................      35,819,450    (1.2%)
 Retail-Discount......................................      11,151,245    (0.4%)
 Retail-Office Supplies...............................      20,860,390    (0.7%)
 Retail-Restaurants...................................      75,633,305    (2.5%)
 Super Regional Banks.................................      11,427,330    (0.4%)
 Telecommunication Equipment..........................     180,832,646    (6.0%)
 Telecommunication Services...........................      31,562,024    (1.1%)
 Telephone-Integrated.................................      15,503,209    (0.5%)
 Television...........................................      41,936,217    (1.4%)
                                                        --------------
 Total Common Stock...................................   2,684,842,260   (89.4%)
                                                        --------------
LONG-TERM DEBT SECURITIES
Corporate Bonds:
 Retail Internet......................................      13,019,556    (0.4%)
 Telecommunication Services...........................      15,050,000    (0.5%)
                                                        --------------
 Total Corporate Bonds................................      28,069,556    (0.9%)
                                                        --------------
SHORT-TERM OBLIGATIONS
Repurchase Agreements.................................     217,600,000    (7.3%)
U.S. Government Agencies..............................      74,360,555    (2.5%)
                                                        --------------
Total Short-Term Obligations..........................     291,960,555   (9.8%)
                                                        --------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS.....................................   3,004,872,371  (100.1%)
Other Assets Less Liabilities.........................      (2,889,168)   (0.1%)
                                                        --------------
NET ASSETS............................................  $3,001,983,203  (100.0%)
                                                        ==============
</TABLE>

                                       28
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                    Invesco Variable Investment Funds, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            Invesco
                                                           VIF-High
                                                        Yield Portfolio
                                                        ---------------
                                                             Value
                                                           (Note 2A)
 <S>                                                    <C>             <C>
 COMMON STOCKS & WARRANTS
 Computer Related.....................................    $    20,475     (0.0%)
 Telecommunications--Long Distance....................          1,500     (0.0%)
 Telephone............................................          3,454     (0.0%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Common Stocks & Warrants.......................         25,429     (0.0%)
                                                          -----------
 PREFERRED STOCK
 Publishing...........................................        304,500     (0.5%)
 Telecommunications--Cellular & Wireless..............        445,000     (0.8%)
 Telecommunications--Long Distance....................      1,005,000     (1.8%)
 Telephone............................................        368,083     (0.6%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Preferred Stock................................      2,122,583     (3.7%)
                                                          -----------
 FIXED INCOME SECURITIES
 Corporate Bonds:
 Biotechnology........................................        552,500     (0.9%)
 Broadcasting.........................................      2,861,250     (4.9%)
 Cable................................................      5,033,700     (8.6%)
 Chemicals............................................      1,100,750     (1.9%)
 Communications--Equipment & Manufacturing............        866,000     (1.5%)
 Computer Related.....................................      2,974,625     (5.1%)
 Electric Utilities...................................      2,348,825     (4.0%)
 Electrical Equipment.................................        206,000     (0.4%)
 Engineering & Construction...........................        182,000     (0.3%)
 Gaming...............................................      1,955,238     (3.3%)
 Healthcare Services..................................        740,000     (1.3%)
 Household Products...................................        365,000     (0.6%)
 Iron & Steel.........................................        703,570     (1.2%)
 Lodging--Hotels......................................        225,000     (0.4%)
 Metals & Mining......................................        350,000     (0.6%)
 Oil & Gas Related....................................      2,483,975     (4.3%)
 Paper & Forest Products..............................      1,046,060     (1.8%)
 Personal Care........................................        257,250     (0.4%)
 Pollution Control....................................        895,000     (1.5%)
 Services.............................................      2,530,312     (4.3%)
 Shipping.............................................         95,000     (0.2%)
 Specialty Printing...................................        683,750     (1.2%)
 Telecommunications--Cellular & Wireless..............      2,369,250     (4.1%)
 Telecommunications--Long Distance....................      9,060,975    (15.5%)
 Telephone............................................     11,058,433    (18.9%)
 Textiles & Apparel Manufacturing.....................        915,000     (1.6%)
                                                          -----------
 Total Corporate Bonds................................     51,859,463    (88.8%)
                                                          -----------
 SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS
 Repurchase Agreements................................      2,968,000     (5.1%)
                                                          -----------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS....................................     56,975,475    (97.6%)
 Other Assets Less Liabilities........................      1,403,130     (2.4%)
                                                          -----------
 NET ASSETS...........................................    $58,378,605   (100.0%)
                                                          ===========
</TABLE>

                                       29
<PAGE>

                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Continued)

                    Invesco Variable Investment Funds, Inc.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      Invesco                Invesco
                                   VIF Industrial           VIF Realty
                                  Income Portfolio          Portfolio
                                  ----------------          ----------
                                       Value                  Value
                                     (Note 2A)              (Note 2A)
 <S>                              <C>              <C>      <C>        <C>
 COMMON STOCK
 Aerospace & Defense............    $ 1,589,874      (2.0%)
 Automobiles....................        534,375      (0.7%)
 Banks..........................      4,750,694      (5.9%)
 Beverages......................      1,977,650      (2.5%)
 Broadcasting...................      1,475,500      (1.8%)
 Chemicals......................      1,117,962      (1.4%)
 Communications-Equipment
  Manufacturing.................        972,562      (1.2%)
 Computer Related...............      2,232,056      (2.8%)
 Electric Utilities.............      1,438,590      (1.8%)
 Electronics....................      1,305,600      (1.6%)
 Electrical Equipment...........      1,934,375      (2.4%)
 Electronics-semiconductor......      2,512,500      (3.1%)
 Financial......................      1,111,250      (1.4%)
 Foods..........................      3,215,379      (4.0%)
 Gaming.........................      1,000,000      (1.3%)
 Gold & Precious Metals Mining..        171,500      (0.2%)
 Health Care Drugs-
  Pharmaceuticals...............      6,066,543      (7.6%)
 Health Care Related............      1,027,465      (1.3%)
 Household Products.............      2,176,500      (2.7%)
 Insurance......................      2,640,875      (3.3%)
 Investment Bank/Broker Firm....        999,250      (1.3%)
 Lodging-Hotels.................        772,937      (1.0%)
 Manufacturing..................        996,938      (1.2%)
 Oil & Gas Related..............      5,659,240      (7.1%)
 Paper & Forest Products........      1,426,638      (1.8%)
 Railroads......................      2,285,062      (2.9%)
 Real Estate Investment Trust...                            $ 544,084   (87.0%)
 Real Estate Related............                               16,965    (2.7%)
 Restaurants....................      1,007,812      (1.3%)
 Retail.........................      4,794,062      (6.0%)
 Savings & Loan.................      1,154,156      (1.4%)
 Services.......................        452,625      (0.6%)
 Telecommunications-Cellular &
  Wireless......................        825,000      (1.0%)
 Telecommunications-Long
  Distance......................      1,555,313      (2.0%)
 Telephone......................      4,413,256      (5.5%)
 Tobacco........................        394,187      (0.5%)
                                    -----------             ---------
 Total Common Stock.............     65,987,726     (82.6%)   561,049   (89.7%)
                                    -----------             ---------
 FIXED INCOME SECURITIES
 Corporate Bonds:
 Airlines.......................        293,092      (0.4%)
 Building Materials.............        510,509      (0.6%)
 Cable..........................        355,750      (0.4%)
 Computer Related...............        222,469      (0.3%)
 Electric Utilities.............      3,076,860      (3.9%)
 Insurance......................        425,360      (0.5%)
 Lodging-Hotels.................        218,852      (0.3%)
 Oil & Gas Related..............      1,470,846      (1.9%)
 Paper & Forest Products........        105,624      (0.1%)
 Services.......................         98,500      (0.1%)
 Telecommunications-Long
  Distance......................        151,250      (0.2%)
 Telephone......................        653,905      (0.8%)
                                    -----------
 Total Corporate Bonds..........      7,583,017      (9.5%)
                                    -----------
 US Government Obligations......        712,501      (0.9%)
                                    -----------
 Total Fixed Income Securities..      8,295,518     (10.4%)
 SHORT TERM INVESTMENTS
 Repurchase Agreements..........      6,586,000      (8.2%)
                                    -----------             ---------
 TOTAL INVESTMENTS..............     80,869,244    (101.2%)   561,049   (89.7%)
 Other Assets Less Liabilities..       (976,632)    (-1.2%)    64,429   (10.3%)
                                    -----------             ---------
 NET ASSETS.....................    $79,892,612    (100.0%) $ 625,478  (100.0%)
                                    ===========             =========
</TABLE>

                                       30
<PAGE>

                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Concluded)
5.SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1999--(Concluded)

  The value of investments in the Funds portfolios are determined using the
following valuation techniques:

  Portfolio securities that are traded on domestic stock exchanges are valued
at the last price as of the close of business on the day the securities are
being valued. Lacking any sales, securities are valued at the mean between
closing bid and asked prices (except the Loomis Sayles High Yield Bond
Portfolio, which values such securities at last bid price). Securities trading
primarily on non-domestic exchanges are valued at the preceding closing price
on the exchange where it primarily trades (or in the case of Loomis Sayles
High Yield Bond and Scudder Global Equity Portfolios, the last sale). A
security that is listed or traded on more than one exchange is valued at the
quotation on the exchange determined to be the primary market for that
security by the Board of Directors or its delegates. If no closing price is
available, then such securities are valued, first, by using the mean between
last current bid and asked prices or, second, by using last available closing
price (except the Scudder Global Equity Portfolio which second values such
securities at last current bid or third, by using last available price).

  Domestic securities traded on over-the-counter markets are valued at the
mean between bid and asked prices or yield equivalent as obtained from two or
more dealers that make markets in the securities (except for the Loomis Sayles
High Yield Bond Portfolio, which would value such security, first, at last
sale price and, second, at bid price or the Scudder Global Equity and the
Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap Value Portfolios that value such securities,
first, at last sale price and, second, at last bid price). All non-U.S.
securities traded on over-the-counter securities markets are valued at the
last sale quote if market quotations are available, or the last closing bid
price if there is no active trading in a particular security for a given day
(except the Neuberger Berman Partners Mid Cap Value Portfolio which is valued
at the mean between closing bid and asked prices). Where market quotations are
not readily available for such non-domestic, over-the-counter securities, then
such securities will be valued in good faith by a method that the Board of
Directors or its delegates believe accurately reflects fair value. Portfolio
securities that are traded both on over-the-counter markets and on a stock
exchange are valued according to the broadest and most representative market.
For debt securities, this ordinarily will be the over-the-counter market.
Securities and assets for which market quotations are not readily available
(e.g. certain long-term bonds and notes) are valued at fair value as
determined in good faith by or under the direction of the Board of Directors,
including valuations furnished by a pricing service retained for this purpose
and typically utilized by other institutional-sized trading organizations.

  Forward foreign exchange contracts are valued based on the closing prices of
the forward currency contract rates in London foreign exchange markets on a
daily basis as provided by a reliable bank or dealer.

  Short-term instruments with a remaining maturity of sixty days or less are
valued utilizing the amortized cost method of valuation. If for any reason the
fair value of any security is not fairly reflected by such method, such
security will be valued by the same method as securities having a maturity of
more than sixty days.

  Options on securities, indices, or futures contracts are valued at the last
sales price available as of the close of business on the day of valuation. If
no sales have occurred, options are valued at the mean between bid and asked
prices. Options on currencies are valued at the spot price each day. As a
general matter, futures contracts are marked-to-market daily. The value of
futures contracts will be the sum of the margin deposits plus or minus the
difference between the value of the futures contract on each day the net asset
value is calculated and the value on the date the futures contract originated.
For this purpose, value is the value established on a recognized commodity
exchange, or by reference to other customary sources, with gain or loss being
realized when the futures contract closes or expires.


                                      31


<PAGE>   1

                         INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              PAGE
                                                              ----
<S>                                                           <C>

METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
Independent Auditors' Report................................
Consolidated Statements of Income for the years ended
  December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997..........................
Consolidated Balance Sheets at December 31, 1999 and 1998...
Consolidated Statements of Equity for the years ended
  December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997..........................
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended
  December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997..........................
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements..................
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   2

                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT

The Board of Directors and Policyholders of
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company:

     We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and subsidiaries (the "Company") as of
December 31, 1999 and 1998, and the related consolidated statements of income,
equity and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December
31, 1999. These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the
Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these
consolidated financial statements based on our audits.

     We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards 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. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

     In our opinion, such consolidated financial statements present fairly, in
all material respects, the consolidated financial position of Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company and subsidiaries at December 31, 1999 and 1998, and the
consolidated results of their operations and their consolidated cash flows for
each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 1999 in conformity with
generally accepted accounting principles.

Deloitte & Touche LLP

New York, New York
February 7, 2000
<PAGE>   3

                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                       CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999, 1998 AND 1997
                                 (IN MILLIONS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               1999       1998       1997
                                                               ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                           <C>        <C>        <C>
REVENUES
Premiums....................................................  $12,088    $11,503    $11,278
Universal life and investment-type product policy fees......    1,438      1,360      1,418
Net investment income.......................................    9,816     10,228      9,491
Other revenues..............................................    2,154      1,994      1,491
Net realized investment gains (losses) (net of amounts
  allocable to other accounts of $(67), $608 and $231,
  respectively).............................................      (70)     2,021        787
                                                              -------    -------    -------
                                                               25,426     27,106     24,465
                                                              -------    -------    -------
EXPENSES
Policyholder benefits and claims (excludes amounts directly
  related to net realized investment gains (losses) of
  $(21), $368 and $161, respectively).......................   13,105     12,638     12,403
Interest credited to policyholder account balances..........    2,441      2,711      2,878
Policyholder dividends......................................    1,690      1,651      1,742
Other expenses (excludes amounts directly related to net
  realized investment gains (losses) of $(46), $240 and $70,
  respectively).............................................    6,755      8,019      5,771
                                                              -------    -------    -------
                                                               23,991     25,019     22,794
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Income before provision for income taxes and extraordinary
  item......................................................    1,435      2,087      1,671
Provision for income taxes..................................      593        740        468
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Income before extraordinary item............................      842      1,347      1,203
Extraordinary item -- demutualization expense...............      225          4         --
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Net income..................................................  $   617    $ 1,343    $ 1,203
                                                              =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
<PAGE>   4

                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998
                                 (IN MILLIONS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                1999        1998
                                                                ----        ----
<S>                                                           <C>         <C>
ASSETS
Investments:
  Fixed maturities available-for-sale, at fair value........  $ 96,981    $100,767
  Equity securities, at fair value..........................     2,006       2,340
  Mortgage loans on real estate.............................    19,739      16,827
  Real estate and real estate joint ventures................     5,649       6,287
  Policy loans..............................................     5,598       5,600
  Other limited partnership interests.......................     1,331       1,047
  Short-term investments....................................     3,055       1,369
  Other invested assets.....................................     1,501       1,484
                                                              --------    --------
                                                               135,860     135,721

Cash and cash equivalents...................................     2,789       3,301
Accrued investment income...................................     1,725       1,994
Premiums and other receivables..............................     6,681       5,972
Deferred policy acquisition costs...........................     8,492       6,538
Deferred income taxes.......................................       603          --
Other.......................................................     4,141       3,752
Separate account assets.....................................    64,941      58,068
                                                              --------    --------
                                                              $225,232    $215,346
                                                              ========    ========
LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
Liabilities:
Future policy benefits......................................  $ 73,582    $ 72,701
Policyholder account balances...............................    45,901      46,494
Other policyholder funds....................................     4,498       4,061
Policyholder dividends payable..............................       974         947
Short-term debt.............................................     4,208       3,585
Long-term debt..............................................     2,514       2,903
Current income taxes payable................................       548         403
Deferred income taxes payable...............................        --         545
Other.......................................................    14,376      10,772
Separate account liabilities................................    64,941      58,068
                                                              --------    --------
                                                               211,542     200,479
                                                              --------    --------

Commitments and contingencies (Note 9)

Equity:
Retained earnings...........................................    14,100      13,483
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)...............      (410)      1,384
                                                              --------    --------
                                                                13,690      14,867
                                                              --------    --------
                                                              $225,232    $215,346
                                                              ========    ========
</TABLE>

          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
<PAGE>   5

                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                       CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF EQUITY
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999, 1998 AND 1997
                                 (IN MILLIONS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    ACCUMULATED OTHER
                                                                               COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)
                                                                        -----------------------------------------
                                                                             NET           FOREIGN      MINIMUM
                                                                          UNREALIZED      CURRENCY      PENSION
                                             COMPREHENSIVE   RETAINED     INVESTMENT     TRANSLATION   LIABILITY
                                    TOTAL    INCOME (LOSS)   EARNINGS   GAINS (LOSSES)   ADJUSTMENT    ADJUSTMENT
                                    -----    -------------   --------   --------------   -----------   ----------
<S>                                <C>       <C>             <C>        <C>              <C>           <C>
Balance at January 1, 1997.......  $11,983                   $10,937       $ 1,028          $  18         $ --
Comprehensive income:
  Net income.....................    1,203      $ 1,203        1,203
                                                -------
  Other comprehensive income:
    Unrealized investment gains,
      net of related offsets,
      reclassification
      adjustments and income
      taxes......................                   870                        870
    Foreign currency translation
      adjustments................                   (49)                                      (49)
                                                -------
    Other comprehensive income...      821          821
                                                -------
  Comprehensive income...........               $ 2,024
                                                =======
                                   -------                   -------       -------          -----         ----
Balance at December 31, 1997.....   14,007                    12,140         1,898            (31)          --
Comprehensive income:
  Net income.....................    1,343      $ 1,343        1,343
                                                -------
  Other comprehensive loss:
    Unrealized investment losses,
      net of related offsets,
      reclassification
      adjustments and income
      taxes......................                  (358)                      (358)
    Foreign currency translation
      adjustments................                  (113)                                     (113)
    Minimum pension liability
      adjustment.................                   (12)                                                   (12)
                                                -------
    Other comprehensive loss.....     (483)        (483)
                                                -------
  Comprehensive income...........               $   860
                                                =======
                                   -------                   -------       -------          -----         ----
Balance at December 31, 1998.....   14,867                    13,483         1,540           (144)         (12)
Comprehensive loss:
  Net income.....................      617      $   617          617
                                                -------
  Other comprehensive loss:
    Unrealized investment losses,
      net of related offsets,
      reclassification
      adjustments and income
      taxes......................                (1,837)                    (1,837)
    Foreign currency translation
      adjustments................                    50                                        50
    Minimum pension liability
      adjustment.................                    (7)                                                    (7)
                                                -------
    Other comprehensive loss.....   (1,794)      (1,794)
                                                -------
  Comprehensive loss.............               $(1,177)
                                                =======
                                   -------                   -------       -------          -----         ----
Balance at December 31, 1999.....  $13,690                   $14,100       $  (297)         $ (94)        $(19)
                                   =======                   =======       =======          =====         ====
</TABLE>

          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
<PAGE>   6

                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999, 1998 AND 1997
                                 (IN MILLIONS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                1999        1998        1997
                                                                ----        ----        ----
<S>                                                           <C>         <C>         <C>
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net income..................................................  $    617    $  1,343    $  1,203
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided
    by operating activities:
    Depreciation and amortization expenses..................       173          56         (36)
    (Gains) losses from sales of investments and businesses,
      net...................................................       137      (2,629)     (1,018)
    Change in undistributed income of real estate joint
      ventures and other limited partnership interests......      (322)        (91)        157
    Interest credited to policyholder account balances......     2,441       2,711       2,878
    Universal life and investment-type product policy
      fees..................................................    (1,438)     (1,360)     (1,418)
    Change in accrued investment income.....................       269        (181)       (215)
    Change in premiums and other receivables................      (619)     (2,681)       (792)
    Change in deferred policy acquisition costs, net........      (389)       (188)       (159)
    Change in insurance related liabilities.................     2,248       1,481       2,364
    Change in income taxes payable..........................        22         251         (99)
    Change in other liabilities.............................       857       2,390        (206)
    Other, net..............................................      (131)       (260)        213
                                                              --------    --------    --------
Net cash provided by operating activities...................     3,865         842       2,872
                                                              --------    --------    --------
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
  Sales, maturities and repayments of:
    Fixed maturities........................................    73,120      57,857      75,346
    Equity securities.......................................       760       3,085       1,821
    Mortgage loans on real estate...........................     1,992       2,296       2,784
    Real estate and real estate joint ventures..............     1,062       1,122       2,046
    Other limited partnership interests.....................       469         146         166
  Purchases of:
    Fixed maturities........................................   (72,253)    (67,543)    (76,603)
    Equity securities.......................................      (410)       (854)     (2,121)
    Mortgage loans on real estate...........................    (4,395)     (2,610)     (4,119)
    Real estate and real estate joint ventures..............      (341)       (423)       (624)
    Other limited partnership interests.....................      (465)       (723)       (338)
  Net change in short-term investments......................    (1,577)       (761)         63
  Net change in policy loans................................         2         133          17
  Purchase of businesses, net of cash received..............    (2,972)         --        (430)
  Proceeds from sales of businesses.........................        --       7,372         135
  Net change in investment collateral.......................     2,692       3,769          --
  Other, net................................................       (73)       (183)        191
                                                              --------    --------    --------
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities.........    (2,389)      2,683      (1,666)
                                                              --------    --------    --------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
  Policyholder account balances:
    Deposits................................................    18,428      19,361      16,061
    Withdrawals.............................................   (20,650)    (21,706)    (18,831)
  Short-term debt, net......................................       623      (1,002)      1,265
  Long-term debt issued.....................................        44         693         989
  Long-term debt repaid.....................................      (433)       (481)       (104)
                                                              --------    --------    --------
Net cash used in financing activities.......................    (1,988)     (3,135)       (620)
                                                              --------    --------    --------
Change in cash and cash equivalents.........................      (512)        390         586
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of year................     3,301       2,911       2,325
                                                              --------    --------    --------
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, END OF YEAR......................  $  2,789    $  3,301    $  2,911
                                                              ========    ========    ========
Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information:
Cash paid during the year for:
  Interest..................................................  $    388    $    367    $    422
                                                              ========    ========    ========
  Income taxes..............................................  $    587    $    579    $    589
                                                              ========    ========    ========
</TABLE>

          See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
<PAGE>   7

                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
           (DOLLAR AMOUNTS ARE IN MILLIONS UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED.)

1. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

  BUSINESS

     Metropolitan Life Insurance Company ("MetLife") and its subsidiaries (the
"Company") is a leading provider of insurance and financial services to a broad
section of institutional and individual customers. The Company offers life
insurance, annuities and mutual funds to individuals and group insurance and
retirement and savings products and services to corporations and other
institutions.

  PLAN OF REORGANIZATION

     On September 28, 1999, the board of directors of MetLife adopted, pursuant
to the New York Insurance Law, a plan of reorganization, and subsequently
adopted amendments to the plan, pursuant to which MetLife proposes to convert
from a mutual life insurance company to a stock life insurance company and
become a wholly-owned subsidiary of MetLife, Inc. The plan was approved by
MetLife's voting policyholders on February 7, 2000. The plan will become
effective at such time as the New York Superintendent of Insurance
("Superintendent") approves it based on finding, among other things, that the
plan is fair and equitable to policyholders. The plan requires an initial public
offering of common stock and provides for other capital raising transactions on
the effective date of the plan.

     On the date the plan of reorganization becomes effective, each
policyholder's membership interest will be extinguished and each eligible
policyholder will be entitled to receive, in exchange for that interest, trust
interests representing shares of common stock of MetLife, Inc. to be held in a
trust, cash or an adjustment to their policy values in the form of policy
credits, as provided in the plan. In addition, when MetLife demutualizes,
MetLife's Canadian branch will make cash payments to holders of certain policies
transferred to Clarica Life Insurance Company ("Clarica Life") in connection
with the sale of a substantial portion of MetLife's Canadian operations in 1998.
See Note 9.

     The plan of reorganization requires that MetLife establish and operate a
closed block for the benefit of holders of certain individual life insurance
policies of MetLife. Assets will be allocated to the closed block in an amount
that is expected to produce cash flows which, together with anticipated revenue
from the policies included in the closed block, are reasonably expected to be
sufficient to support obligations and liabilities relating to these policies,
including, but not limited to, provisions for the payment of claims and certain
expenses and taxes, and for the continuation of policyholder dividend scales in
effect for 1999, if the experience underlying such dividend scales continues,
and for appropriate adjustments in such scales if the experience changes. The
closed block assets, the cash flows generated by the closed block assets and the
anticipated revenues from the policies in the closed block will benefit only the
holders of these policies included in the closed block. To the extent that, over
time, cash flows from the assets allocated to the closed block and claims and
other experience relating to the closed block are, in the aggregate, more or
less favorable than assumed in establishing the closed block, total dividends
paid to the closed block policyholders in the future may be greater than or less
than which would have been paid to these policyholders if the policyholder
dividend scales in effect for 1999 had been continued. Any cash flows in excess
of amounts assumed will be available for distribution over time to closed block
policyholders and will not be available to stockholders. The closed block will
continue in effect until the last policy in the closed block is no longer in
force.
<PAGE>   8
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The accounting principles to account for the participating policies
included in the closed block will be those used prior to the date of the
demutualization. However, a policyholder dividend obligation will be established
for earnings that will be paid to policyholders as additional dividends in the
amounts described below, unless these earnings are offset by future unfavorable
experience in the closed block. Although all of the cash flows of the closed
block are for the benefit of closed block policyholders, the excess of closed
block liabilities over closed block assets at the effective date will represent
the estimated maximum future contributions from the closed block expected to be
reported in income as the contribution from the closed block after income taxes.
The contribution from the closed block will be recognized in income over the
period the policies and contracts in the closed block remain in force.
Management believes that over time the actual cumulative contributions from the
closed block will approximately equal the expected cumulative contributions, due
to the effect of dividend changes. If, over the period the closed block remains
in existence, the actual cumulative contribution from the closed block is
greater than the expected cumulative contribution from the closed block, the
expected cumulative contribution will be recognized in income with the excess
recorded as a policyholder dividend obligation, because the excess of the actual
cumulative contribution from the closed block over the expected cumulative
contribution will be paid to closed block policyholders as additional
policyholder dividends unless offset by future unfavorable experience of the
closed block. If over such period, the actual cumulative contribution from the
closed block is less than the expected cumulative contribution from the closed
block, the actual contribution will be recognized in income. However, dividends
in the future may be changed, which would be intended to increase future actual
contribution until the actual contribution equal the expected cumulative
contribution.

  BASIS OF PRESENTATION

     The accompanying consolidated financial statements have been prepared in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles ("GAAP"). The New York
State Insurance Department (the "Department") recognizes only statutory
accounting practices for determining and reporting the financial condition and
results of operations of an insurance company for determining solvency under the
New York Insurance Law. No consideration is given by the Department to financial
statements prepared in accordance with GAAP in making such determination.

     The preparation of financial statements requires management to make
estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and
liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the dates of
the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses
during the reporting periods. The most significant estimates include those used
in determining deferred policy acquisition costs, investment allowances and the
liability for future policyholder benefits. Actual results could differ from
those estimates.

  PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION

     The accompanying consolidated financial statements include the accounts of
MetLife and its subsidiaries, partnerships and joint ventures in which MetLife
has a majority voting interest or general partner interest with limited removal
rights by limited partners. All material intercompany accounts and transactions
have been eliminated.

     The Company accounts for its investments in real estate joint ventures and
other limited partnership interests in which it does not have a controlling
interest, but more than a minimal interest, under the equity method of
accounting.

     Minority interest related to consolidated entities included in other
liabilities was $245 and $274 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
<PAGE>   9
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Certain amounts in the prior years' consolidated financial statements have
been reclassified to conform with the 1999 presentation.

  INVESTMENTS

     The Company's fixed maturity and equity securities are classified as
available-for-sale and are reported at their estimated fair value. Unrealized
investment gains and losses on securities are recorded as a separate component
of other comprehensive income (loss), net of policyholder related amounts and
deferred income taxes. The cost of fixed maturity and equity securities is
adjusted for impairments in value deemed to be other than temporary. These
adjustments are recorded as realized losses on investments. Realized gains and
losses on sales of securities are determined on a specific identification basis.
All security transactions are recorded on a trade date basis.

     Mortgage loans on real estate are stated at amortized cost, net of
valuation allowances. Valuation allowances are established for the excess
carrying value of the mortgage loan over its estimated fair value when it is
probable that, based upon current information and events, the Company will be
unable to collect all amounts due under the contractual terms of the loan
agreement. Valuation allowances are based upon the present value of expected
future cash flows discounted at the loan's original effective interest rate or
the collateral value if the loan is collateral dependent. Interest income earned
on impaired loans is accrued on the net carrying value amount of the loan based
on the loan's effective interest rate.

     Real estate, including related improvements, is stated at cost less
accumulated depreciation. Depreciation is provided on a straight-line basis over
the estimated useful life of the asset (typically 20 to 40 years). Cost is
adjusted for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate the
carrying amount of the asset may not be recoverable. Impaired real estate is
written down to estimated fair value with the impairment loss being included in
realized losses on investments. Impairment losses are based upon the estimated
fair value of real estate, which is generally computed using the present value
of expected future cash flows from the real estate discounted at a rate
commensurate with the underlying risks. Real estate acquired in satisfaction of
debt is recorded at estimated fair value at the date of foreclosure. Valuation
allowances on real estate held-for-sale are computed using the lower of
depreciated cost or estimated fair value, net of disposition costs.

     Policy loans are stated at unpaid principal balances.

     Short-term investments are stated at amortized cost, which approximates
fair value.

  DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS

     The Company uses derivative instruments to manage market risk through one
of four principal risk management strategies: the hedging of invested assets,
liabilities, portfolios of assets or liabilities and anticipated transactions.
The Company's derivative strategy employs a variety of instruments including
financial futures, financial forwards, interest rate and foreign currency swaps,
floors, foreign exchange contracts, caps and options.

     The Company's derivative program is monitored by senior management. The
Company's risk of loss is typically limited to the fair value of its derivative
instruments and not to the notional or contractual amounts of these derivatives.
Risk arises from changes in the fair value of the underlying instruments and,
with respect to over-the-counter transactions, from the possible inability of
counterparties to meet the terms of the contracts. The Company has strict
policies regarding the financial stability and credit standing of its major
counterparties.
<PAGE>   10
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The Company's derivative instruments are designated as hedges and are
highly correlated to the underlying risk at contract inception. The Company
monitors the effectiveness of its hedges throughout the contract term using an
offset ratio of 80 to 125 percent as its minimum acceptable threshold for hedge
effectiveness. Derivative instruments that lose their effectiveness are marked
to market through net investment income.

     Gains or losses on financial futures contracts entered into in anticipation
of investment transactions are deferred and, at the time of the ultimate
investment purchase or disposition, recorded as an adjustment to the basis of
the purchased assets or to the proceeds on disposition. Gains or losses on
financial futures used in asset risk management are deferred and amortized into
net investment income over the remaining term of the investment. Gains or losses
on financial futures used in portfolio risk management are deferred and
amortized into net investment income or policyholder benefits over the remaining
life of the hedged sector of the underlying portfolio.

     Financial forward contracts that are entered into to purchase securities
are marked to fair value through other comprehensive income (loss), similar to
the accounting for the investment security. Such contracts are accounted for at
settlement by recording the purchase of the specified securities at the
contracted value. Gains or losses resulting from the termination of forward
contracts are recognized immediately as a component of net investment income.

     Interest rate and certain foreign currency swaps involve the periodic
exchange of payments without the exchange of underlying principal or notional
amounts. Net receipts or payments are accrued and recognized over the term of
the swap agreement as an adjustment to net investment income or other expense.
Gains or losses resulting from swap terminations are amortized over the
remaining term of the underlying asset or liability. Gains and losses on swaps
and certain foreign forward exchange contracts entered into in anticipation of
investment transactions are deferred and, at the time of the ultimate investment
purchase or disposition, reflected as an adjustment to the basis of the
purchased assets or to the proceeds of disposition. In the event the asset or
liability underlying a swap is disposed of, the swap position is closed
immediately and any gain or loss is recorded as an adjustment to the proceeds
from disposition.

     The Company periodically enters into collars, which consist of purchased
put and written call options, to lock in unrealized gains on equity securities.
Collars are marked to market through other comprehensive income (loss), similar
to the accounting for the underlying equity securities. Purchased interest rate
caps and floors are used to offset the risk of interest rate changes related to
insurance liabilities. Premiums paid on floors, caps and options are split into
two components, time value and intrinsic value. Time value is amortized over the
life of the applicable derivative instrument. The intrinsic value and any gains
or losses relating to these derivative instruments adjust the basis of the
underlying asset or liability and are recognized as a component of net
investment income over the term of the underlying asset or liability being
hedged as an adjustment to the yield.

  CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS

     The Company considers all highly liquid investments purchased with an
original maturity of three months or less to be cash equivalents.
<PAGE>   11
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

  PROPERTY, EQUIPMENT AND LEASEHOLD IMPROVEMENTS

     Property, equipment and leasehold improvements, which are included in other
assets, are stated at cost, less accumulated depreciation and amortization.
Depreciation is determined using either the straight-line or
sum-of-the-years-digits method over the estimated useful lives of the assets.
Estimated lives range from 20 to 40 years for real estate and 5 to 15 years for
all other property and equipment. Accumulated depreciation of property and
equipment and accumulated amortization on leasehold improvements was $1,130 and
$1,098 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. Related depreciation and
amortization expense was $103, $116 and $103 for the years ended December 31,
1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

  DEFERRED POLICY ACQUISITION COSTS

     The costs of acquiring new insurance business that vary with, and are
primarily related to, the production of new business are deferred. Such costs,
which consist principally of commissions, agency and policy issue expenses, are
amortized with interest over the expected life of the contract for participating
traditional life, universal life and investment-type products. Generally,
deferred policy acquisition costs are amortized in proportion to the present
value of estimated gross margins or profits from investment, mortality, expense
margins and surrender charges. Interest rates are based on rates in effect at
the inception of the contracts. Actual gross margins or profits can vary from
management's estimates resulting in increases or decreases in the rate of
amortization. Management periodically updates these estimates and evaluates the
recoverability of deferred policy acquisition costs. When appropriate,
management revises its assumptions of the estimated gross margins or profits of
these contracts, and the cumulative amortization is re-estimated and adjusted by
a cumulative charge or credit to current operations.

     Deferred policy acquisition costs for non-participating traditional life,
non-medical health and annuity policies with life contingencies are amortized in
proportion to anticipated premiums. Assumptions as to anticipated premiums are
made at the date of policy issuance and are consistently applied during the
lives of the contracts. Deviations from estimated experience are included in
operations when they occur. For these contracts, the amortization period is
typically the estimated life of the policy.

     Deferred policy acquisition costs related to internally replaced contracts
are expensed at date of replacement.

     Deferred policy acquisition costs for property and casualty insurance
contracts, which are primarily comprised of commissions and certain underwriting
expenses, are deferred and amortized on a pro rata basis over the applicable
contract term or reinsurance treaty.

     On September 28, 1999, the Company's Board of Directors adopted a plan of
reorganization. Consequently, in the fourth quarter of 1999, the Company was
able to commit to state insurance regulatory authorities that it would establish
investment sub-segments to further align investments with the traditional
individual life business of the Individual segment. As a result, future
dividends for the traditional individual life business will be determined based
on the results of the new investment sub-segments. Additionally, estimated
future gross margins used to determine amortization of deferred policy
acquisition costs and the amount of unrealized investment gains and losses
relating to these products are based on investments in the new sub-segments.
Using the investments in the sub-segments to determine estimated gross margins
and unrealized investment gains and losses increased 1999 amortization of
deferred policy acquisition costs by $56 (net of income taxes of $32) and
decreased other comprehensive loss in 1999 by $123 (net of income taxes of $70).
<PAGE>   12
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Information regarding deferred policy acquisition costs is as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                        ---------------------------
                                                         1999       1998      1997
                                                         ----       ----      ----
<S>                                                     <C>        <C>       <C>
Balance at January 1..................................  $ 6,538    $6,436    $7,227
Capitalized during the year...........................    1,160     1,025     1,000
                                                        -------    ------    ------
     Total............................................    7,698     7,461     8,227
                                                        -------    ------    ------
Amortization allocated to:
  Net realized investment gains (losses)..............      (46)      240        70
  Unrealized investment gains (losses)................   (1,628)     (216)      727
  Other expenses......................................      862       587       771
                                                        -------    ------    ------
     Total amortization...............................     (812)      611     1,568
                                                        -------    ------    ------
Dispositions and other................................      (18)     (312)     (223)
                                                        -------    ------    ------
Balance at December 31................................  $ 8,492    $6,538    $6,436
                                                        =======    ======    ======
</TABLE>

     Amortization of deferred policy acquisition costs is allocated to (1)
realized investment gains and losses to provide consolidated statement of income
information regarding the impact of such gains and losses on the amount of the
amortization, (2) unrealized investment gains and losses to provide information
regarding the amount of deferred policy acquisition costs that would have been
amortized if such gains and losses had been realized and (3) other expenses to
provide amounts related to the gross margins or profits originating from
transactions other than investment gains and losses.

     Realized investment gains and losses related to certain products have a
direct impact on the amortization of deferred policy acquisition costs.
Presenting realized investment gains and losses net of related amortization of
deferred policy acquisition costs provides information useful in evaluating the
operating performance of the Company. This presentation may not be comparable to
presentations made by other insurers.

  INTANGIBLE ASSETS

     The excess of cost over the fair value of net assets acquired ("goodwill")
and other intangible assets, including the value of business acquired, are
included in other assets. Goodwill is amortized on a straight-line basis over a
period ranging from 10 to 30 years. The Company continually reviews goodwill to
assess recoverability from future operations using undiscounted cash flows.
Impairments are recognized in operating results if a permanent diminution in
value is deemed to have occurred. Other intangible assets are amortized over the
expected policy or contract duration in relation to the present value of
estimated gross profits from such policies and contracts.
<PAGE>   13
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              GOODWILL           OTHER INTANGIBLE ASSETS
                                        --------------------    --------------------------
                                        1999    1998    1997     1999      1998      1997
                                        ----    ----    ----     ----      ----      ----
<S>                                     <C>     <C>     <C>     <C>       <C>       <C>
YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31
Net Balance at January 1..............  $404    $359    $136    $1,006    $1,055    $  767
Acquisitions..........................   237      67     240       156        39       355
Amortization..........................   (30)    (22)    (17)     (114)      (88)      (67)
                                        ----    ----    ----    ------    ------    ------
Net Balance at December 31............  $611    $404    $359    $1,048    $1,006    $1,055
                                        ====    ====    ====    ======    ======    ======
DECEMBER 31
Accumulated amortization..............  $118    $ 88            $  392    $  278
                                        ====    ====            ======    ======
</TABLE>

  FUTURE POLICY BENEFITS AND POLICYHOLDER ACCOUNT BALANCES

     Future policy benefit liabilities for participating traditional life
insurance policies are equal to the aggregate of (a) net level premium reserves
for death and endowment policy benefits (calculated based upon the nonforfeiture
interest rate, ranging from 3% to 10%, and mortality rates guaranteed in
calculating the cash surrender values described in such contracts), (b) the
liability for terminal dividends and (c) premium deficiency reserves, which are
established when the liabilities for future policy benefits plus the present
value of expected future gross premiums are insufficient to provide for expected
future policy benefits and expenses after deferred policy acquisition costs are
written off.

     Future policy benefit liabilities for traditional annuities are equal to
accumulated contractholder fund balances during the accumulation period and the
present value of expected future payments after annuitization. Interest rates
used in establishing such liabilities range from 3% to 8%. Future policy benefit
liabilities for non-medical health insurance are calculated using the net level
premium method and assumptions as to future morbidity, withdrawals and interest,
which provide a margin for adverse deviation. Interest rates used in
establishing such liabilities range from 3% to 10%. Future policy benefit
liabilities for disabled lives are estimated using the present value of benefits
method and experience assumptions as to claim terminations, expenses and
interest. Interest rates used in establishing such liabilities range from 3% to
10%.

     Policyholder account balances for universal life and investment-type
contracts are equal to the policy account values, which consist of an
accumulation of gross premium payments plus credited interest, ranging from 2%
to 17%, less expenses, mortality charges and withdrawals.

     The liability for unpaid claims and claim expenses for property and
casualty insurance represents the amount estimated for claims that have been
reported but not settled and claims incurred but not reported. Liabilities for
unpaid claims are estimated based upon the Company's historical experience and
other actuarial assumptions that consider the effects of current developments,
anticipated trends and risk management programs. Revisions of these estimates
are included in operations in the year such refinements are made.

  RECOGNITION OF INSURANCE REVENUE AND RELATED BENEFITS

     Premiums related to traditional life and annuity policies with life
contingencies are recognized as revenues when due. Benefits and expenses are
provided against such revenues to recognize profits over the estimated lives of
the policies. When premiums are due over a significantly shorter period than the
period over which benefits are provided, any excess profit is deferred and
recognized into operations in a constant relationship to insurance in-force or,
for annuities, the amount of expected future policy benefit payments.
<PAGE>   14
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Premiums related to non-medical health contracts are recognized on a pro
rata basis over the applicable contract term.

     Premiums related to universal life and investment-type products are
credited to policyholder account balances. Revenues from such contracts consist
of amounts assessed against policyholder account balances for mortality, policy
administration and surrender charges. Amounts that are charged to operations
include interest credited and benefit claims incurred in excess of related
policyholder account balances.

     Premiums related to property and casualty contracts are recognized as
revenue on a pro rata basis over the applicable contract term. Unearned premiums
are included in other liabilities.

  DIVIDENDS TO POLICYHOLDERS

     Dividends to policyholders are determined annually by the board of
directors. The aggregate amount of policyholders' dividends is related to actual
interest, mortality, morbidity and expense experience for the year, as well as
management's judgment as to the appropriate level of statutory surplus to be
retained by MetLife and its insurance subsidiaries.

  DIVIDEND RESTRICTIONS

     MetLife, when it converts from a mutual life insurance company to a stock
life insurance company, may be restricted as to the amounts it may pay as
dividends to MetLife, Inc. Under the New York Insurance Law, the Superintendent
has broad discretion to determine whether the financial condition of a stock
life insurance company would support the payment of dividends to its
shareholders. The Department has established informal guidelines for the
Superintendent's determinations which focus upon, among other things, the
overall financial condition and profitability of the insurer under statutory
accounting practices.

  PARTICIPATING BUSINESS

     Participating business represented approximately 19% and 21% of the
Company's life insurance in-force, and 84% and 81% of the number of life
insurance policies in-force, at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
Participating policies represented approximately 42% and 44%, 39% and 40%, and
41% and 41% of gross and net life insurance premiums for the years ended
December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

  INCOME TAXES

     MetLife and its includable life insurance and non-life insurance
subsidiaries file a consolidated U.S. federal income tax return in accordance
with the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended (the "Code"). Under
the Code, the amount of federal income tax expense incurred by mutual life
insurance companies includes an equity tax calculated based upon a prescribed
formula that incorporates a differential earnings rate between stock and mutual
life insurance companies. MetLife will not be subject to the equity tax when it
converts to a stock life insurance company. The future tax consequences of
temporary differences between financial reporting and tax bases of assets and
liabilities are measured at the balance sheet dates and are recorded as deferred
income tax assets and liabilities.

  REINSURANCE

     The Company has reinsured certain of its life insurance and property and
casualty insurance contracts with other insurance companies under various
agreements. Amounts due from
<PAGE>   15
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

reinsurers are estimated based upon assumptions consistent with those used in
establishing the liabilities related to the underlying reinsured contracts.
Policy and contract liabilities are reported gross of reinsurance credits.
Deferred policy acquisition costs are reduced by amounts recovered under
reinsurance contracts. Amounts received from reinsurers for policy
administration are reported in other revenues.

  SEPARATE ACCOUNTS

     Separate accounts are established in conformity with insurance laws and are
generally not chargeable with liabilities that arise from any other business of
the Company. Separate account assets are subject to general account claims only
to the extent the value of such assets exceeds the separate account liabilities.
Investments (stated at estimated fair value) and liabilities of the separate
accounts are reported separately as assets and liabilities. Deposits to separate
accounts, investment income and realized and unrealized gains and losses on the
investments of the separate accounts accrue directly to contractholders and,
accordingly, are not reflected in the Company's consolidated statements of
income and cash flows. Mortality, policy administration and surrender charges to
all separate accounts are included in revenues. See Note 6.

  FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION

     Balance sheet accounts of foreign operations are translated at the exchange
rates in effect at each year-end and income and expense accounts are translated
at the average rates of exchange prevailing during the year. The local
currencies of foreign operations are the functional currencies unless the local
economy is highly inflationary. Translation adjustments are charged or credited
directly to other comprehensive income (loss). Gains and losses from foreign
currency transactions are reported in other expenses and were insignificant for
all years presented.

  EXTRAORDINARY ITEM -- DEMUTUALIZATION EXPENSE

     The accompanying consolidated statements of income include extraordinary
charges of $225 (net of income taxes of $35) and $4 (net of income taxes of $2)
for the years ended December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively, related to costs
associated with the demutualization.

  APPLICATION OF ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

     Effective January 1, 1999, the Company adopted Statement of Position
("SOP") 98-5, Reporting on the Costs of Start-Up Activities ("SOP 98-5"). SOP
98-5 broadly defines start-up activities. SOP 98-5 requires costs of start-up
activities and organization costs to be expensed as incurred. Adoption of SOP
98-5 did not have a material effect on the Company's consolidated financial
statements.

     Effective January 1, 1999, the Company adopted SOP 98-1, Accounting for the
Costs of Computer Software Developed or Obtained for Internal Use ("SOP 98-1").
SOP 98-1 provides guidance for determining when an entity should capitalize or
expense external and internal costs of computer software developed or obtained
for internal use. Adoption of the provisions of SOP 98-1 had the effect of
increasing other assets by $82 at December 31, 1999.

     Effective January 1, 1999, the Company adopted SOP 97-3, Accounting for
Insurance and Other Enterprises for Insurance Related Assessments ("SOP 97-3").
SOP 97-3 provides guidance on accounting by insurance and other enterprises for
assessments related to insurance activities including recognition, measurement
and disclosure of guaranty fund and other insurance related
<PAGE>   16
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

assessments. Adoption of SOP 97-3 did not have a material effect on the
Company's consolidated financial statements.

     In 1998, the Company adopted the provisions of Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 125, Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of
Financial Assets and Extinguishments of Liabilities ("SFAS 125") which were
deferred by SFAS 127, Deferral of the Effective Date of Certain Provisions of
FASB Statement No. 125. The deferred provisions provide accounting and reporting
standards related to repurchase agreements, dollar rolls, securities lending and
similar transactions. Adoption of the provisions had the effect of increasing
assets and liabilities by $3,769 at December 31, 1998 and increasing other
revenues and other expenses by $266 for the year ended December 31, 1998.

     During 1997, the Company changed to the retrospective interest method of
accounting for investment income on structured notes in accordance with Emerging
Issues Task Force Consensus No. 96-12, Recognition of Interest Income and
Balance Sheet Classification of Structured Notes. This accounting change
increased 1997 net investment income by $175, which included an immaterial
amount related to prior years.

     In June 1999, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards No. 137, Accounting for Derivative Instruments
and Hedging Activities -- Deferral of the Effective Date of FASB Statement No.
133 ("SFAS 137"). SFAS 137 defers the provisions of Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 133, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging
Activities ("SFAS 133") until January 1, 2001. SFAS 133 requires, among other
things, that all derivatives be recognized in the consolidated balance sheets as
either assets or liabilities and measured at fair value. The corresponding
derivative gains and losses should be reported based upon the hedge
relationship, if such a relationship exists. Changes in the fair value of
derivatives that are not designated as hedges or that do not meet the hedge
accounting criteria in SFAS 133 are required to be reported in income. The
Company is in the process of quantifying the impact of SFAS 133 on its
consolidated financial statements.

     In October 1998, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
("AICPA") issued Statement of Position ("SOP") 98-7, Accounting for Insurance
and Reinsurance Contracts That Do Not Transfer Insurance Risk ("SOP 98-7"). SOP
98-7 provides guidance on the method of accounting for insurance and reinsurance
contracts that do not transfer insurance risk, defined in the SOP as the deposit
method. SOP 98-7 classifies insurance and reinsurance contracts for which the
deposit method is appropriate into those that 1) transfer only significant
timing risk, 2) transfer only significant underwriting risk, 3) transfer neither
significant timing or underwriting risk and 4) have an indeterminate risk. The
Company is required to adopt SOP 98-7 as of January 1, 2000. Adoption of SOP
98-7 is not expected to have a material effect on the Company's consolidated
financial statements.
<PAGE>   17
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

2. INVESTMENTS

     The components of net investment income were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Fixed maturities....................................  $ 6,766    $ 6,563    $ 6,445
Equity securities...................................       40         78         50
Mortgage loans on real estate.......................    1,479      1,572      1,684
Real estate and real estate joint ventures..........    1,426      1,529      1,718
Policy loans........................................      340        387        368
Other limited partnership interests.................      199        196        302
Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments...      173        187        169
Other...............................................      501        841        368
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                       10,924     11,353     11,104
Less: Investment expenses...........................    1,108      1,125      1,613
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                      $ 9,816    $10,228    $ 9,491
                                                      =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

     Net realized investment gains (losses), including changes in valuation
allowances, were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                          -------------------------
                                                          1999      1998      1997
                                                          ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                       <C>      <C>       <C>
Fixed maturities........................................  $(538)   $  573    $  118
Equity securities.......................................     99       994       224
Mortgage loans on real estate...........................     28        23        56
Real estate and real estate joint ventures..............    265       424       446
Other limited partnership interests.....................     33        13        12
Sales of businesses.....................................     --       531       139
Other...................................................    (24)       71        23
                                                          -----    ------    ------
                                                           (137)    2,629     1,018
Amounts allocable to:
  Future policy benefit loss recognition................     --      (272)     (126)
  Deferred policy acquisition costs.....................     46      (240)      (70)
  Participating contracts...............................     21       (96)      (35)
                                                          -----    ------    ------
                                                          $ (70)   $2,021    $  787
                                                          =====    ======    ======
</TABLE>

     Realized investment gains (losses) have been reduced by (1) additions to
future policy benefits resulting from the need to establish additional
liabilities due to the recognition of investment gains, (2) deferred policy
acquisition cost amortization to the extent that such amortization results from
realized investment gains and losses, and (3) additions to participating
contractholder accounts when amounts equal to such investment gains and losses
are credited to the contractholders' accounts. This presentation may not be
comparable to presentations made by other insurers.
<PAGE>   18
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The components of net unrealized investment gains (losses), included in
accumulated other comprehensive income (loss), were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Fixed maturities....................................  $(1,828)   $ 4,809    $ 4,766
Equity securities...................................      875        832      1,605
Other invested assets...............................      165        154        294
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                         (788)     5,795      6,665
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Amounts allocable to:
  Future policy benefit loss recognition............     (249)    (2,248)    (2,189)
  Deferred policy acquisition costs.................      697       (931)    (1,147)
  Participating contracts...........................     (118)      (212)      (312)
Deferred income taxes...............................      161       (864)    (1,119)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                          491     (4,255)    (4,767)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                      $  (297)   $ 1,540    $ 1,898
                                                      =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

     The changes in net unrealized investment gains (losses) were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                        ---------------------------
                                                         1999       1998      1997
                                                         ----       ----      ----
<S>                                                     <C>        <C>       <C>
Balance at January 1..................................  $ 1,540    $1,898    $1,028
Unrealized investment gains (losses) during the
  year................................................   (6,583)     (870)    3,402
Unrealized investment (gains) losses relating to:
  Future policy benefit loss recognition..............    1,999       (59)     (970)
  Deferred policy acquisition costs...................    1,628       216      (727)
  Participating contracts.............................       94       100      (303)
Deferred income taxes.................................    1,025       255      (532)
                                                        -------    ------    ------
Balance at December 31................................  $  (297)   $1,540    $1,898
                                                        =======    ======    ======
Net change in unrealized investment gains (losses)....  $(1,837)   $ (358)   $  870
                                                        =======    ======    ======
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   19
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

  FIXED MATURITIES AND EQUITY SECURITIES

     Fixed maturities and equity securities at December 31, 1999 were as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             COST OR     GROSS UNREALIZED
                                            AMORTIZED    ----------------    ESTIMATED
                                              COST        GAIN      LOSS     FAIR VALUE
                                            ---------     ----      ----     ----------
<S>                                         <C>          <C>       <C>       <C>
Fixed Maturities:
  Bonds:
     U.S. Treasury securities and
       obligations of U.S. government
       corporations and agencies..........   $ 5,990     $  456    $  147     $ 6,299
     States and political subdivisions....     1,583          4        45       1,542
     Foreign governments..................     4,090        210        94       4,206
     Corporate............................    47,505        585     1,913      46,177
     Mortgage and asset-backed
       securities.........................    27,396        112       847      26,661
     Other................................    12,235        313       462      12,086
                                             -------     ------    ------     -------
                                              98,799      1,680     3,508      96,971
  Redeemable preferred stocks.............        10         --        --          10
                                             -------     ------    ------     -------
                                             $98,809     $1,680    $3,508     $96,981
                                             =======     ======    ======     =======
Equity Securities:
  Common stocks...........................   $   980     $  921    $   35     $ 1,866
  Nonredeemable preferred stocks..........       151         --        11         140
                                             -------     ------    ------     -------
                                             $ 1,131     $  921    $   46     $ 2,006
                                             =======     ======    ======     =======
</TABLE>

     Fixed maturities and equity securities at December 31, 1998 were as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             COST OR     GROSS UNREALIZED
                                            AMORTIZED    -----------------    ESTIMATED
                                              COST        GAIN       LOSS     FAIR VALUE
                                            ---------     ----       ----     ----------
<S>                                         <C>          <C>         <C>      <C>
Fixed Maturities:
  Bonds:
     U.S. Treasury securities and
       obligations of U.S. government
       corporations and agencies..........   $ 6,640     $1,117      $ 10      $  7,747
     States and political subdivisions....       597         26        --           623
     Foreign governments..................     3,435        254        88         3,601
     Corporate............................    46,377      2,471       260        48,588
     Mortgage and asset-backed
       securities.........................    26,456        569        46        26,979
     Other................................    12,438      1,069       293        13,214
                                             -------     ------      ----      --------
                                              95,943      5,506       697       100,752
  Redeemable preferred stocks.............        15         --        --            15
                                             -------     ------      ----      --------
                                             $95,958     $5,506      $697      $100,767
                                             =======     ======      ====      ========
Equity Securities:
  Common stocks...........................   $ 1,286     $  923      $ 77      $  2,132
  Nonredeemable preferred stocks..........       222          4        18           208
                                             -------     ------      ----      --------
                                             $ 1,508     $  927      $ 95      $  2,340
                                             =======     ======      ====      ========
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   20
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The Company held foreign currency derivatives with notional amounts of
$4,002 and $716 to hedge the exchange rate risk associated with foreign bonds at
December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. The Company also held options with
fair values of $(11) to hedge the market value of common stocks at December 31,
1998.

     At December 31, 1999, fixed maturities held by the Company that were below
investment grade or not rated by an independent rating agency had an estimated
fair value of $8,813. At December 31, 1999, non-income producing fixed
maturities were insignificant.

     The amortized cost and estimated fair value of bonds at December 31, 1999,
by contractual maturity date, are shown below:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        AMORTIZED    ESTIMATED
                                                          COST       FAIR VALUE
                                                        ---------    ----------
<S>                                                     <C>          <C>
Due in one year or less...............................   $ 3,180      $ 3,217
Due after one year through five years.................    18,152       18,061
Due after five years through ten years................    23,755       23,114
Due after ten years...................................    26,316       25,918
                                                         -------      -------
                                                          71,403       70,310
Mortgage and asset-backed securities..................    27,396       26,661
                                                         -------      -------
                                                         $98,799      $96,971
                                                         =======      =======
</TABLE>

     Fixed maturities not due at a single maturity date have been included in
the above table in the year of final maturity. Actual maturities may differ from
contractual maturities due to the exercise of prepayment options.

     Sales of securities were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Securities classified as available-for-sale:
  Proceeds..........................................  $59,852    $46,913    $69,275
  Gross realized gains..............................  $   605    $ 2,053    $   965
  Gross realized losses.............................  $   911    $   486    $   627
Fixed maturities classified as held-to-maturity:
  Proceeds..........................................  $    --    $    --    $   352
  Gross realized gains..............................  $    --    $    --    $     5
  Gross realized losses.............................  $    --    $    --    $     1
</TABLE>

     Gross realized losses above exclude writedowns recorded during 1999 for
permanently impaired available-for-sale securities of $133.

     During 1997, fixed maturities with an amortized cost of $11,682 were
transferred from held-to-maturity to available-for-sale. Other comprehensive
income at the date of reclassification was increased by $198 excluding the
effects of deferred income taxes and policyholder related amounts.

     Excluding investments in U.S. governments and agencies, the Company is not
exposed to any significant concentration of credit risk in its fixed maturities
portfolio.
<PAGE>   21
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

  SECURITIES LENDING PROGRAM

     The Company participates in securities lending programs whereby large
blocks of securities, which are returnable to the Company on short notice and
included in investments, are loaned to third parties, primarily major brokerage
firms. The Company requires a minimum of 102% of the fair value of the loaned
securities to be separately maintained as collateral for the loans. Securities
with a cost or amortized cost of $6,458 and $4,005 and estimated fair value of
$6,391 and $4,552 were on loan under the program at December 31, 1999 and 1998,
respectively. The Company was liable for cash collateral under its control of
$6,461 and $3,769 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. This liability is
included in other liabilities. Security collateral on deposit from securities
borrowers is returnable to them on short notice and is not reflected in the
consolidated financial statements.

  STATUTORY DEPOSITS

     The Company had investment assets on deposit with regulatory agencies of
$476 and $466 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.

  MORTGAGE LOANS ON REAL ESTATE

     Mortgage loans were categorized as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           DECEMBER 31,
                                             ----------------------------------------
                                                    1999                  1998
                                             ------------------    ------------------
                                             AMOUNT     PERCENT    AMOUNT     PERCENT
                                             ------     -------    ------     -------
<S>                                          <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
Commercial mortgage loans..................  $14,931       75%     $12,503       74%
Agricultural mortgage loans................    4,816       24%       4,256       25%
Residential mortgage loans.................       82        1%         241        1%
                                             -------      ---      -------      ---
                                              19,829      100%      17,000      100%
                                                          ===                   ===
Less: Valuation allowances.................       90                   173
                                             -------               -------
                                             $19,739               $16,827
                                             =======               =======
</TABLE>

     Mortgage loans on real estate are collateralized by properties primarily
located throughout the United States. At December 31, 1999, approximately 16%,
8% and 8% of the properties were located in California, New York and Florida,
respectively. Generally, the Company (as the lender) requires that a minimum of
one-fourth of the purchase price of the underlying real estate be paid by the
borrower.

     Certain of the Company's real estate joint ventures have mortgage loans
with the Company. The carrying values of such mortgages were $547 and $606 at
December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
<PAGE>   22
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Changes in mortgage loan valuation allowances were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                       ---------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                    <C>        <C>        <C>
Balance at January 1.................................  $ 173      $ 289      $ 469
Additions............................................     40         40         61
Deductions for writedowns and dispositions...........   (123)      (130)      (241)
Deductions for disposition of affiliates.............     --        (26)        --
                                                       -----      -----      -----
Balance at December 31...............................  $  90      $ 173      $ 289
                                                       =====      =====      =====
</TABLE>

     A portion of the Company's mortgage loans on real estate was impaired and
consisted of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              DECEMBER 31,
                                                             --------------
                                                             1999     1998
                                                             ----     ----
<S>                                                          <C>     <C>
Impaired mortgage loans with valuation allowances..........  $540    $  823
Impaired mortgage loans without valuation allowances.......   437       375
                                                             ----    ------
                                                              977     1,198
Less: Valuation allowances.................................    83       149
                                                             ----    ------
                                                             $894    $1,049
                                                             ====    ======
</TABLE>

     The average investment in impaired mortgage loans on real estate was
$1,134, $1,282 and $1,680 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997,
respectively. Interest income on impaired mortgages was $101, $109 and $110 for
the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

     The investment in restructured mortgage loans on real estate was $980 and
$1,140 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. Interest income of $80, $74
and $91 was recognized on restructured loans for the years ended December 31,
1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively. Gross interest income that would have been
recorded in accordance with the original terms of such loans amounted to $92,
$87 and $116 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

     Mortgage loans on real estate with scheduled payments of 60 days (90 days
for agriculture mortgages) or more past due or in foreclosure had an amortized
cost of $44 and $65 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
<PAGE>   23
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

  REAL ESTATE AND REAL ESTATE JOINT VENTURES

     Real estate and real estate joint ventures consisted of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                DECEMBER 31,
                                                              ----------------
                                                               1999      1998
                                                               ----      ----
<S>                                                           <C>       <C>
Real estate and real estate joint ventures
  held-for-investment.......................................  $5,440    $6,301
Impairments.................................................    (289)     (408)
                                                              ------    ------
                                                               5,151     5,893
                                                              ------    ------
Real estate and real estate joint ventures held-for-sale....     719       546
Impairments.................................................    (187)     (119)
Valuation allowance.........................................     (34)      (33)
                                                              ------    ------
                                                                 498       394
                                                              ------    ------
                                                              $5,649    $6,287
                                                              ======    ======
</TABLE>

     Accumulated depreciation on real estate was $2,235 and $2,065 at December
31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. Related depreciation expense was $247, $282 and
$338 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

     Real estate and real estate joint ventures were categorized as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             DECEMBER 31,
                                                --------------------------------------
                                                      1999                 1998
                                                -----------------    -----------------
                                                AMOUNT    PERCENT    AMOUNT    PERCENT
                                                ------    -------    ------    -------
<S>                                             <C>       <C>        <C>       <C>
Office........................................  $3,846       68%     $4,265       68%
Retail........................................     587       10%        640       10%
Apartments....................................     474        8%        418        7%
Land..........................................     258        5%        313        5%
Agriculture...................................      96        2%        195        3%
Other.........................................     388        7%        456        7%
                                                ------      ---      ------      ---
                                                $5,649      100%     $6,287      100%
                                                ======      ===      ======      ===
</TABLE>

     The Company's real estate holdings are primarily located throughout the
United States. At December 31, 1999, approximately 25%, 24% and 10% of the
Company's real estate holdings were located in New York, California and Texas,
respectively.

     Changes in real estate and real estate joint ventures held-for-sale
valuation allowance were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                             ------------------------
                                                             1999     1998      1997
                                                             ----     ----      ----
<S>                                                          <C>      <C>      <C>
Balance at January 1.......................................  $ 33     $110     $ 661
Additions charged (credited) to operations.................    36       (5)      (76)
Deductions for writedowns and dispositions.................   (35)     (72)     (475)
                                                             ----     ----     -----
Balance at December 31.....................................  $ 34     $ 33     $ 110
                                                             ====     ====     =====
</TABLE>

     Investment income related to impaired real estate and real estate joint
ventures held-for-investment was $61, $105 and $28 for the years ended December
31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively. Investment income related to real estate
and real estate joint ventures held-for-sale
<PAGE>   24
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

was $14, $3 and $11 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997,
respectively. The carrying value of non-income producing real estate and real
estate joint ventures was $22 and $1 at December 31, 1999 and 1998,
respectively.

     The Company owned real estate acquired in satisfaction of debt of $47 and
$154 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.

     Real estate of $37, $69 and $151 was acquired in satisfaction of debt
during the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

  LEVERAGED LEASES

     Leveraged leases, included in other invested assets, consisted of the
following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             DECEMBER 31,
                                                           ----------------
                                                            1999      1998
                                                            ----      ----
<S>                                                        <C>       <C>
Investment...............................................  $1,016    $1,067
Estimated residual values................................     559       607
                                                           ------    ------
                                                            1,575     1,674
Unearned income..........................................    (417)     (471)
                                                           ------    ------
                                                           $1,158    $1,203
                                                           ======    ======
</TABLE>

     The investment amounts set forth above are generally due in monthly
installments. The payment periods generally range from four to 15 years, but in
certain circumstances are as long as 30 years. Average yields range from 7% to
12%. These receivables are generally collateralized by the related property.

3. DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS

     The table below provides a summary of the carrying value, notional amount
and current market or fair value of derivative financial instruments (other than
equity options) held at December 31, 1999 and 1998:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        1999                                         1998
                                     ------------------------------------------   ------------------------------------------
                                                              CURRENT MARKET                               CURRENT MARKET
                                                              OR FAIR VALUE                                OR FAIR VALUE
                                     CARRYING   NOTIONAL   --------------------   CARRYING   NOTIONAL   --------------------
                                      VALUE      AMOUNT    ASSETS   LIABILITIES    VALUE      AMOUNT    ASSETS   LIABILITIES
                                     --------   --------   ------   -----------   --------   --------   ------   -----------
<S>                                  <C>        <C>        <C>      <C>           <C>        <C>        <C>      <C>
Financial futures..................    $ 27     $ 3,140     $37        $ 10         $ 3      $ 2,190     $ 8        $  6
Foreign exchange contracts.........      --          --      --          --          --          136      --           2
Interest rate swaps................     (32)      1,316      11          40          (9)       1,621      17          50
Foreign currency swaps.............      --       4,002      26         103          (1)         580       3          62
Caps...............................       1      12,376       3          --          --        8,391      --          --
                                       ----     -------     ---        ----         ---      -------     ---        ----
Total contractual commitments......    $ (4)    $20,834     $77        $153         $(7)     $12,918     $28        $120
                                       ====     =======     ===        ====         ===      =======     ===        ====
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   25
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The following is a reconciliation of the notional amounts by derivative
type and strategy at December 31, 1999 and 1998:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      DECEMBER 31, 1998               TERMINATIONS/   DECEMBER 31, 1999
                                       NOTIONAL AMOUNT    ADDITIONS    MATURITIES      NOTIONAL AMOUNT
                                      -----------------   ---------   -------------   -----------------
<S>                                   <C>                 <C>         <C>             <C>
BY DERIVATIVE TYPE
Financial futures...................       $ 2,190         $18,259       $17,309           $ 3,140
Foreign exchange contracts..........           136             702           838                --
Interest rate swaps.................         1,621             429           734             1,316
Foreign currency swaps..............           580           3,501            79             4,002
Caps................................         8,391           5,860         1,875            12,376
                                           -------         -------       -------           -------
Total contractual commitments.......       $12,918         $28,751       $20,835           $20,834
                                           =======         =======       =======           =======
BY STRATEGY
Liability hedging...................       $ 8,741         $ 5,865       $ 2,035           $12,571
Invested asset hedging..............           864           4,288           937             4,215
Portfolio hedging...................         2,830          13,920        14,729             2,021
Anticipated transaction hedging.....           483           4,678         3,134             2,027
                                           -------         -------       -------           -------
Total contractual commitments.......       $12,918         $28,751       $20,835           $20,834
                                           =======         =======       =======           =======
</TABLE>

     The following table presents the notional amounts of derivative financial
instruments by maturity at December 31, 1999:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      REMAINING LIFE
                            -------------------------------------------------------------------
                            ONE YEAR     AFTER ONE YEAR     AFTER FIVE YEARS
                            OR LESS    THROUGH FIVE YEARS   THROUGH TEN YEARS   AFTER TEN YEARS    TOTAL
                            --------   ------------------   -----------------   ---------------    -----
<S>                         <C>        <C>                  <C>                 <C>               <C>
Financial futures.........   $3,140         $    --               $ --               $ --         $ 3,140
Interest rate swaps.......      833             483                 --                 --           1,316
Foreign currency swaps....        7           3,371                503                121           4,002
Caps......................    3,426           8,930                 20                 --          12,376
                             ------         -------               ----               ----         -------
Total contractual
  commitments.............   $7,406         $12,784               $523               $121         $20,834
                             ======         =======               ====               ====         =======
</TABLE>

     In addition to the derivative instruments above, the Company uses equity
option contracts as invested asset hedges. There were ninety-two thousand equity
option contracts outstanding with a carrying value of $(11) and a market value
of $(11) at December 31, 1998.

4. FAIR VALUE INFORMATION

     The estimated fair values of financial instruments have been determined by
using available market information and the valuation methodologies described
below. Considerable judgment is often required in interpreting market data to
develop estimates of fair value. Accordingly, the estimates presented herein may
not necessarily be indicative of amounts that could be realized in a current
market exchange. The use of different assumptions or valuation methodologies may
have a material effect on the estimated fair value amounts.
<PAGE>   26
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Amounts related to the Company's financial instruments were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      NOTIONAL    CARRYING    ESTIMATED
DECEMBER 31, 1999                                      AMOUNT      VALUE      FAIR VALUE
- -----------------                                     --------    --------    ----------
<S>                                                   <C>         <C>         <C>
Assets:
  Fixed maturities..................................              $96,981      $96,981
  Equity securities.................................                2,006        2,006
  Mortgage loans on real estate.....................               19,739       19,452
  Policy loans......................................                5,598        5,618
  Short-term investments............................                3,055        3,055
  Cash and cash equivalents.........................                2,789        2,789
  Mortgage loan commitments.........................    $465           --           (7)
Liabilities:
  Policyholder account balances.....................               37,170       36,893
  Short-term debt...................................                4,208        4,208
  Long-term debt....................................                2,514        2,466
  Investment collateral.............................                6,451        6,451
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     NOTIONAL    CARRYING    ESTIMATED
DECEMBER 31, 1998                                     AMOUNT      VALUE      FAIR VALUE
- -----------------                                    --------    --------    ----------
<S>                                                  <C>         <C>         <C>
Assets:
  Fixed maturities.................................              $100,767     $100,767
  Equity securities................................                 2,340        2,340
  Mortgage loans on real estate....................                16,827       17,793
  Policy loans.....................................                 5,600        6,143
  Short-term investments...........................                 1,369        1,369
  Cash and cash equivalents........................                 3,301        3,301
  Mortgage loan commitments........................    $472            --           14
Liabilities:
  Policyholder account balances....................                37,448       37,664
  Short-term debt..................................                 3,585        3,585
  Long-term debt...................................                 2,903        3,006
  Investment collateral............................                 3,769        3,769
</TABLE>

     The methods and assumptions used to estimate the fair values of financial
instruments are summarized as follows:

  FIXED MATURITIES AND EQUITY SECURITIES

     The fair value of fixed maturities and equity securities are based upon
quotations published by applicable stock exchanges or received from other
reliable sources. For securities in which the market values were not readily
available, fair values were estimated using quoted market prices of comparable
investments.

  MORTGAGE LOANS ON REAL ESTATE AND MORTGAGE LOAN COMMITMENTS

     Fair values for mortgage loans on real estate are estimated by discounting
expected future cash flows, using current interest rates for similar loans with
similar credit risk. For mortgage loan commitments, the estimated fair value is
the net premium or discount of the commitments.
<PAGE>   27
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

  POLICY LOANS

     Fair values for policy loans are estimated by discounting expected future
cash flows using U.S. treasury rates to approximate interest rates and the
Company's past experiences to project patterns of loan accrual and repayment
characteristics.

  CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS AND SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS

     The carrying values for cash and cash equivalents and short-term
investments approximated fair market values due to the short-term maturities of
these instruments.

  POLICYHOLDER ACCOUNT BALANCES

     The fair value of policyholder account balances are estimated by
discounting expected future cash flows, based on interest rates currently being
offered for similar contracts with maturities consistent with those remaining
for the agreements being valued.

  SHORT-TERM AND LONG-TERM DEBT AND INVESTMENT COLLATERAL

     The fair values of short-term and long-term debt and investment collateral
are determined by discounting expected future cash flows, using risk rates
currently available for debt with similar terms and remaining maturities.

  DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS

     The fair value of derivative instruments, including financial futures,
financial forwards, interest rate and foreign currency swaps, floors, foreign
exchange contracts, caps and options are based upon quotations obtained from
dealers or other reliable sources. See Note 3 for derivative fair value
disclosures.

5. EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS

  PENSION BENEFIT AND OTHER BENEFIT PLANS

     The Company is both the sponsor and administrator of defined benefit
pension plans covering all eligible employees and sales representatives of
MetLife and certain of its subsidiaries. Retirement benefits are based upon
years of credited service and final average earnings history.

     The Company also provides certain postemployment benefits and certain
postretirement health care and life insurance benefits for retired employees
through insurance contracts. Substantially all of the Company's employees may,
in accordance with the plans applicable to the
<PAGE>   28
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

postretirement benefits, become eligible for these benefits if they attain
retirement age, with sufficient service, while working for the Company.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   DECEMBER 31,
                                                       ------------------------------------
                                                       PENSION BENEFITS     OTHER BENEFITS
                                                       ----------------    ----------------
                                                        1999      1998      1999      1998
                                                        ----      ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                    <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
Change in projected benefit obligation:
Projected benefit obligation at beginning of year....  $3,920    $3,573    $1,708    $1,763
  Service cost.......................................     100        90        28        31
  Interest cost......................................     271       257       107       114
  Actuarial (gains) losses...........................    (260)      212      (281)      (74)
  Divestitures, curtailments and terminations........     (22)       24        10       (13)
  Change in benefits.................................      --        12        --        --
Benefits paid........................................    (272)     (248)      (89)     (113)
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Projected benefit obligation at end of year..........   3,737     3,920     1,483     1,708
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Change in plan assets:
Contract value of plan assets at beginning of year...   4,403     4,056     1,123     1,004
  Actuarial return on plan assets....................     575       680       141       171
  Employer contribution..............................      20        15        24        61
  Benefits paid......................................    (272)     (248)      (89)     (113)
  Other payments.....................................      --      (100)       --        --
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Contract value of plan assets at end of year.........   4,726     4,403     1,199     1,123
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Over (under) funded..................................     989       483      (284)     (585)
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Unrecognized net asset at transition.................     (66)      (98)       --        --
Unrecognized net actuarial gains.....................    (564)      (78)     (487)     (322)
Unrecognized prior service cost......................     127       145        (2)       (2)
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Prepaid (accrued) benefit cost.......................  $  486    $  452    $ (773)   $ (909)
                                                       ======    ======    ======    ======
Qualified plan prepaid pension cost..................  $  632    $  568    $   --    $   --
Non-qualified plan accrued pension cost..............    (146)     (116)       --        --
                                                       ------    ------    ------    ------
Prepaid benefit cost.................................  $  486    $  452    $   --    $   --
                                                       ======    ======    ======    ======
</TABLE>

     The aggregate projected benefit obligation and aggregate contract value of
plan assets for the pension plans were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        NON-QUALIFIED
                                     QUALIFIED PLAN          PLAN              TOTAL
                                    ----------------    --------------    ----------------
                                     1999      1998     1999     1998      1999      1998
                                     ----      ----     ----     ----      ----      ----
<S>                                 <C>       <C>       <C>      <C>      <C>       <C>
Aggregate projected benefit
  obligation......................  $3,482    $3,697    $ 255    $ 223    $3,737    $3,920
Aggregate contract value of plan
  assets (principally Company
  contracts)......................   4,726     4,403       --       --     4,726     4,403
                                    ------    ------    -----    -----    ------    ------
Over (under) funded...............  $1,244    $  706    $(255)   $(223)   $  989    $  483
                                    ======    ======    =====    =====    ======    ======
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   29
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The assumptions used in determining the aggregate projected benefit
obligation and aggregate contract value for the pension and other benefits were
as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            PENSION BENEFITS             OTHER BENEFITS
                                      ----------------------------   -----------------------
                                          1999            1998          1999         1998
                                          ----            ----          ----         ----
<S>                                   <C>             <C>            <C>          <C>
Weighted average assumptions at
  December 31,
Discount rate.......................  6.25% - 7.75%   6.5% - 7.25%   6% - 7.75%       7%
Expected rate of return on plan
  assets............................   8% - 10.5%     8.5% - 10.5%    6% - 9%     7.25% - 9%
Rate of compensation increase.......   4.5% - 8.5%    4.5% - 8.5%       N/A          N/A
</TABLE>

     The assumed health care cost trend rates used in measuring the accumulated
nonpension postretirement benefit obligation were 6.5% for pre-Medicare eligible
claims and 6% for Medicare eligible claims in both 1999 and 1998.

     Assumed health care cost trend rates may have a significant effect on the
amounts reported for health care plans. A one-percentage point change in assumed
health care cost trend rates would have the following effects:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             ONE PERCENT    ONE PERCENT
                                                              INCREASE       DECREASE
                                                             -----------    -----------
<S>                                                          <C>            <C>
Effect on total of service and interest cost components....     $ 14           $ 11
Effect of accumulated postretirement benefit obligation....     $134           $111
</TABLE>

     The components of periodic benefit costs were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               PENSION BENEFITS         OTHER BENEFITS
                                             ---------------------    ------------------
                                             1999    1998    1997     1999   1998   1997
                                             ----    ----    ----     ----   ----   ----
<S>                                          <C>     <C>     <C>      <C>    <C>    <C>
Service cost...............................  $ 100   $  90   $  74    $ 28   $ 31   $ 30
Interest cost..............................    271     257     247     107    114    122
Expected return on plan assets.............   (363)   (337)   (324)    (89)   (79)   (66)
Amortization of prior actuarial gains......     (6)    (11)     (5)    (11)   (13)    (4)
Curtailment (credit) cost..................    (17)    (10)     --      10      4     --
                                             -----   -----   -----    ----   ----   ----
Net periodic benefit cost (credit).........  $ (15)  $ (11)  $  (8)   $ 45   $ 57   $ 82
                                             =====   =====   =====    ====   ====   ====
</TABLE>

  SAVINGS AND INVESTMENT PLANS

     The Company sponsors savings and investment plans for substantially all
employees under which the Company matches a portion of employee contributions.
The Company contributed $45, $43 and $44 for the years ended December 31, 1999,
1998 and 1997, respectively.

6. SEPARATE ACCOUNTS

     Separate accounts reflect two categories of risk assumption: non-guaranteed
separate accounts totaling $47,618 and $39,490 at December 31, 1999 and 1998,
respectively, for which the policyholder assumes the investment risk, and
guaranteed separate accounts totaling $17,323 and $18,578 at December 31, 1999
and 1998, respectively, for which MetLife contractually guarantees either a
minimum return or account value to the policyholder.
<PAGE>   30
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Fees charged to the separate accounts by the Company (including mortality
charges, policy administration fees and surrender charges) are reflected in the
Company's revenues as universal life and investment-type product policy fees and
totaled $485, $413 and $287 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and
1997, respectively. Guaranteed separate accounts consisted primarily of Met
Managed Guaranteed Interest Contracts and participating close out contracts. The
average interest rates credited on these contracts were 6.5% and 7% at December
31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. The assets that support these liabilities were
comprised of $16,874 and $16,639 in fixed maturities at December 31, 1999 and
1998, respectively. The portfolios are segregated from other investments and are
managed to minimize liquidity and interest rate risk. In order to minimize the
risk of disintermediation associated with early withdrawals, these investment
products carry a graded surrender charge as well as a market value adjustment.

7. DEBT

     Debt consisted of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             DECEMBER 31,
                                                           ----------------
                                                            1999      1998
                                                            ----      ----
<S>                                                        <C>       <C>
MetLife:
  6.300% surplus notes due 2003..........................  $  397    $  397
  7.000% surplus notes due 2005..........................     249       249
  7.700% surplus notes due 2015..........................     198       198
  7.450% surplus notes due 2023..........................     296       296
  7.785% surplus notes due 2024..........................     148       148
  7.800% surplus notes due 2025..........................     248       248
Other....................................................     130       207
                                                           ------    ------
                                                            1,666     1,743
                                                           ------    ------
Investment related:
  Floating rate debt, interest based on LIBOR............      --       212
  Exchangeable debt, interest rates ranging from 4.90% to
     5.80%, due 2001 and 2002............................     369       371
                                                           ------    ------
                                                              369       583
                                                           ------    ------
Total MetLife............................................   2,035     2,326
                                                           ------    ------
Nvest:
  7.060% senior notes due 2003...........................     110       110
  7.290% senior notes due 2007...........................     160       160
                                                           ------    ------
                                                              270       270
                                                           ------    ------
Other Affiliated Companies:
  Fixed rate notes, interest rates ranging from 6.96% to
     8.51%, maturity dates ranging from 2000 to 2008.....     170       179
  Other..................................................      39       128
                                                           ------    ------
                                                              209       307
                                                           ------    ------
Total long-term debt.....................................   2,514     2,903
Total short-term debt....................................   4,208     3,585
                                                           ------    ------
                                                           $6,722    $6,488
                                                           ======    ======
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   31
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Short-term debt consisted of commercial paper with a weighted average
interest rate of 6.05% and 5.31% and a weighted average maturity of 74 and 44
days at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.

     The Company maintains unsecured credit facilities aggregating $7,000
(five-year facility of $1,000 expiring in April 2003; 364-day facility of $1,000
expiring in April 2000; 364-day facility of $5,000 expiring in September 2000).
Both $1,000 facilities bear interest at LIBOR plus 20 basis points. The $5,000
facility bears interest at various rates under specified borrowing scenarios.
The facilities can be used for general corporate purposes and also provide
backup for the Company's commercial paper program. At December 31, 1999, there
were no outstanding borrowings under any of the facilities.

     Payments of interest and principal on the surplus notes, subordinated to
all other indebtedness, may be made only with the prior approval of the
Superintendent. Subject to the prior approval of the Superintendent, the 7.45%
surplus notes may be redeemed, in whole or in part, at the election of the
Company at any time on or after November 1, 2003.

     Each issue of investment related debt is payable in cash or by delivery of
an underlying security owned by the Company. The amount payable at maturity of
the debt is greater than the principal of the debt if the market value of the
underlying security appreciates above certain levels at the date of debt
repayment as compared to the market value of the underlying security at the date
of debt issuance.

     The aggregate maturities of long-term debt are $93 in 2000, $194 in 2001,
$210 in 2002, $415 in 2003, $126 in 2004 and $1,477 thereafter.

     Interest expense related to the Company's outstanding indebtedness was
$358, $333 and $344 for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997,
respectively.

8. ACQUISITIONS AND DISPOSITIONS

     In 1999 and 1997, respectively, the Company acquired assets of $4,832 and
$3,777 and assumed liabilities of $1,860 and $3,347 through the acquisition of
certain insurance and non-insurance operations. The aggregate purchase prices
were allocated to the assets and liabilities acquired based on their estimated
fair values.

     During 1998, the Company sold MetLife Capital Holdings, Inc. (a commercial
financing company) and a substantial portion of its Canadian and Mexican
insurance operations, which resulted in a realized investment gain of $531.
During 1997, the Company sold its United Kingdom insurance operations, which
resulted in a realized investment gain of $139. Such sales caused a reduction in
assets of $10,663 and $4,342 and liabilities of $3,691 and $4,207 in 1998 and
1997, respectively.

     See Note 16 for information regarding the Company's acquisition of
GenAmerica Corporation.

9. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES

  LITIGATION

     The Company is currently a defendant in approximately 500 lawsuits raising
allegations of improper marketing and sales of individual life insurance
policies or annuities. These lawsuits are generally referred to as "sales
practices claims".
<PAGE>   32
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     On December 28, 1999, after a fairness hearing, the United States District
Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania approved a class action
settlement resolving a multidistrict litigation proceeding involving alleged
sales practices claims. The settlement class includes most of the owners of
permanent life insurance policies and annuity contracts or certificates issued
pursuant to individual sales in the United States by Metropolitan Life Insurance
Company, Metropolitan Insurance and Annuity Company or Metropolitan Tower Life
Insurance Company between January 1, 1982 and December 31, 1997. This class
includes owners of approximately six million in-force or terminated insurance
policies and approximately one million in-force or terminated annuity contracts
or certificates.

     In addition to dismissing the consolidated class actions, the District
Court's order also bars sales practices claims by class members for sales by the
defendant insurers during the class period, effectively resolving all pending
class actions against these insurers. The defendants are in the process of
having these claims dismissed.

     Under the terms of the order, only those class members who excluded
themselves from the settlement may continue an existing, or start a new, sales
practices lawsuit against Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, Metropolitan
Insurance and Annuity Company or Metropolitan Tower Life Insurance Company for
sales that occurred during the class period. Approximately 20,000 class members
elected to exclude themselves from the settlement. Over 400 of the approximately
500 lawsuits noted above are brought by individuals who elected to exclude
themselves from the settlement.

     The settlement provides three forms of relief. General relief, in the form
of free death benefits, is provided automatically to class members who did not
exclude themselves from the settlement or who did not elect the claim evaluation
procedures set forth in the settlement. The claim evaluation procedures permit a
class member to have a claim evaluated by a third party under procedures set
forth in the settlement. Claim awards made under the claim evaluation procedures
will be in the form of policy adjustments, free death benefits or, in some
instances, cash payments. In addition, class members who have or had an
ownership interest in specified policies will also automatically receive
deferred acquisition cost tax relief in the form of free death benefits. The
settlement fixes the aggregate amounts that are available under each form of
relief.

     The Company expects that the total cost of the settlement will be
approximately $957. This amount is equal to the amount of the increase in
liabilities for the death benefits and policy adjustments and the present value
of expected cash payments to be provided to included class members, as well as
attorneys' fees and expenses and estimated other administrative costs, but does
not include the cost of litigation with policyholders who are excluded from the
settlement. The Company believes that the cost of the settlement will be
substantially covered by available reinsurance and the provisions made in its
consolidated financial statements, and thus will not have a material adverse
effect on its business, results of operations or financial position. The Company
has not yet made a claim under those reinsurance agreements and, although there
is a risk that the carriers will refuse coverage for all or part of the claim,
the Company believes this is very unlikely to occur. The Company believes it has
made adequate provision in its consolidated financial statements for all
probable losses for sales practices claims, including litigation costs involving
policyholders who are excluded from the settlement.

     The class action settlement does not resolve nine purported or certified
class actions currently pending against New England Mutual Life Insurance
Company with which the Company merged in 1996. Eight of those actions have been
consolidated as a multidistrict proceeding for pre-trial purposes in the United
States District Court in Massachusetts. That Court certified a mandatory class
as to those claims. Following an appeal of that certification, the United States
<PAGE>   33
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

Court of Appeals remanded the case to the District Court for further
consideration. The Company is negotiating a settlement with class counsel.

     The class action settlement also does not resolve three putative sales
practices class action lawsuits which have been brought against General American
Life Insurance Company. These lawsuits have been consolidated in a single
proceeding in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Missouri. General American Life Insurance Company and counsel for plaintiffs
have negotiated a settlement in principle of this consolidated proceeding.
General American Life Insurance Company has not reached agreement with
plaintiffs' counsel on the attorneys' fees to be paid. However, negotiations are
ongoing.

     In addition, the class action settlement does not resolve two putative
class actions involving sales practices claims filed against Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company in Canada. The class action settlement also does not resolve a
certified class action with conditionally certified subclasses against
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, Metropolitan Insurance and Annuity Company,
Metropolitan Tower Life Insurance Company and various individual defendants
alleging improper sales abroad. That lawsuit is pending in a New York federal
court.

     In the past, the Company has resolved some individual sales practices
claims through settlement, dispositive motion or, in a few instances, trial.
Most of the current cases seek substantial damages, including in some cases
punitive and treble damages and attorneys' fees. Additional litigation relating
to the Company's marketing and sales of individual life insurance may be
commenced in the future.

     Regulatory authorities in a small number of states, including both
insurance departments and one state attorney general, as well as the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., have ongoing investigations or
inquiries relating to the Company's sales of individual life insurance policies
or annuities, including investigations of alleged improper replacement
transactions and alleged improper sales of insurance with inaccurate or
inadequate disclosures as to the period for which premiums would be payable.
Over the past several years, the Company has resolved a number of investigations
by other regulatory authorities for monetary payments and certain other relief,
and may continue to do so in the future.

     MetLife is also a defendant in numerous lawsuits seeking compensatory and
punitive damages for personal injuries allegedly caused by exposure to asbestos
or asbestos-containing products. MetLife has never engaged in the business of
manufacturing, producing, distributing or selling asbestos or
asbestos-containing products. Rather, these lawsuits, currently numbering in the
thousands, have principally been based upon allegations relating to certain
research, publication and other activities of one or more of MetLife's employees
during the period from the 1920s through approximately the 1950s and alleging
that MetLife learned or should have learned of certain health risks posed by
asbestos and, among other things, improperly publicized or failed to disclose
those health risks. Legal theories asserted against MetLife have included
negligence, intentional tort claims and conspiracy claims concerning the health
risks associated with asbestos. While MetLife believes it has meritorious
defenses to these claims, and has not suffered any adverse judgments in respect
of these claims, most of the cases have been resolved by settlements. MetLife
intends to continue to exercise its best judgment regarding settlement or
defense of such cases. The number of such cases that may be brought or the
aggregate amount of any liability that MetLife may ultimately incur is
uncertain.

     Significant portions of amounts paid in settlement of such cases have been
funded with proceeds from a previously resolved dispute with MetLife's primary,
umbrella and first level excess liability insurance carriers. MetLife is
presently in litigation with several of its excess
<PAGE>   34
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

liability insurers regarding amounts payable under its policies with respect to
coverage for these claims. The trial court has granted summary judgment to these
insurers. MetLife has appealed. There can be no assurances regarding the outcome
of this litigation or the amount and timing of recoveries, if any, from these
excess liability insurers. MetLife's asbestos-related litigation with these
insurers should have no effect on recoveries under the excess insurance policies
described below.

     The Company has recorded, in other expenses, charges of $499 ($317
after-tax), $1,895 ($1,203 after-tax) and $300 ($190 after-tax) for the years
ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively, for sales practices claims
and claims for personal injuries caused by exposure to asbestos or
asbestos-containing products. The 1999 charge was principally related to the
settlement of the multidistrict litigation proceeding involving alleged improper
sales practices, accruals for sales practices claims not covered by the
settlement and other legal costs. The 1998 charge was comprised of $925 and $970
for sales practices claims and asbestos-related claims, respectively. The
Company recorded the charges for sales practices claims based on preliminary
settlement discussions and the settlement history of other insurers.

     Prior to the fourth quarter of 1998, the Company established a liability
for asbestos-related claims based on settlement costs for claims that the
Company had settled, estimates of settlement costs for claims pending against
the Company and an estimate of settlement costs for unasserted claims. The
amount for unasserted claims was based on management's estimate of unasserted
claims that would be probable of assertion. A liability is not established for
claims which management believes are only reasonably possible of assertion.
Based on this process, the accrual for asbestos-related claims at December 31,
1997 was $386. Potential liabilities for asbestos-related claims are not easily
quantified, due to the nature of the allegations against the Company, which are
not related to the business of manufacturing, producing, distributing or selling
asbestos or asbestos-containing products, adding to the uncertainty as to the
number of claims that may be brought against the Company.

     During 1998, the Company decided to pursue the purchase of excess insurance
to limit its exposure to asbestos-related claims. In connection with the
negotiations with the casualty insurers to obtain this insurance, the Company
obtained information that caused management to reassess the accruals for
asbestos-related claims. This information included:

     - Information from the insurers regarding the asbestos-related claims
       experience of other insureds, which indicated that the number of claims
       that were probable of assertion against the Company in the future was
       significantly greater than it had assumed in its accruals. The number of
       claims brought against the Company is generally a reflection of the
       number of asbestos-related claims brought against asbestos defendants
       generally and the percentage of those claims in which the Company is
       included as a defendant. The information provided to the Company relating
       to other insureds indicated that the Company had been included as a
       defendant for a significant percentage of total asbestos-related claims
       and that it may be included in a larger percentage of claims in the
       future, because of greater awareness of asbestos litigation generally by
       potential plaintiffs and plaintiffs' lawyers and because of the
       bankruptcy and reorganization or the exhaustion of insurance coverage of
       other asbestos defendants; and that, although volatile, there was an
       upward trend in the number of total claims brought against asbestos
       defendants.

     - Information derived from actuarial calculations the Company made in the
       fourth quarter of 1998 in connection with these negotiations, which
       helped to frame, define and quantify this liability. These calculations
       were made using, among other things, current information regarding the
       Company's claims and settlement experience (which reflected the Com-
<PAGE>   35
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

       pany's decision to resolve an increased number of these claims by
       settlement), recent and historic claims and settlement experience of
       selected other companies and information obtained from the insurers.

     Based on this information, the Company concluded that certain claims that
previously were considered as only reasonably possible of assertion were now
probable of assertion, increasing the number of assumed claims to approximately
three times the number assumed in prior periods. As a result of this
reassessment, the Company increased its liability for asbestos-related claims to
$1,278 at December 31, 1998.

     During 1998, the Company paid $1,407 of premiums for excess of loss
reinsurance agreements and excess insurance policies, consisting of $529 for the
excess of loss reinsurance agreements for sales practices claims and excess
mortality losses and $878 for the excess insurance policies for asbestos-related
claims.

     The Company obtained the excess of loss reinsurance agreements to provide
reinsurance with respect to sales practices claims made on or prior to December
31, 1999 and for certain mortality losses in 1999. These reinsurance agreements
have a maximum aggregate limit of $650, with a maximum sublimit of $550 for
losses for sales practices claims. This coverage is in excess of an aggregate
self-insured retention of $385 with respect to sales practices claims and $506,
plus the Company's statutory policy reserves released upon the death of
insureds, with respect to life mortality losses. At December 31, 1999, the
subject losses under the reinsurance agreements due to sales practices claims
and related counsel fees from the time the Company entered into the reinsurance
agreements did not exceed that self-insured retention. The maximum sublimit of
$550 for sales practices claims was within a range of losses that management
believed were reasonably possible at December 31, 1998. Each excess of loss
reinsurance agreement for sales practices claims and mortality losses contains
an experience fund, which provides for payments to the Company at the
commutation date if experience is favorable at such date. The Company accounts
for the aggregate excess of loss reinsurance agreements as reinsurance; however,
if deposit accounting were applied, the effect on the Company's consolidated
financial statements in 1998, 1999 and 2000 would not be significant.

     Under reinsurance accounting, the excess of the liability recorded for
sales practices losses recoverable under the agreements of $550 over the premium
paid of $529 results in a deferred gain of $21 which is being amortized into
income over the settlement period from January 1999 through April 2000. Under
deposit accounting, the premium would be recorded as an other asset rather than
as an expense, and the reinsurance loss recoverable and the deferred gain would
not have been recorded. Because the agreements also contain an experience fund
which increases with the passage of time, the increase in the experience fund in
1999 and 2000 under deposit accounting would be recognized as interest income in
an amount approximately equal to the deferred gain that will be amortized into
income under reinsurance accounting.

     The excess insurance policies for asbestos-related claims provide for
recovery of losses up to $1,500, which is in excess of a $400 self-insured
retention ($878 of which was recorded as a recoverable at December 31, 1999 and
1998). The asbestos-related policies are also subject to annual and per-claim
sublimits. Amounts are recoverable under the policies annually with respect to
claims paid during the prior calendar year. Although amounts paid in any given
year that are recoverable under the policies will be reflected as a reduction in
the Company's operating cash flows for that year, management believes that the
payments will not have a material adverse effect on the Company's liquidity.
Each asbestos-related policy contains an experience fund and a reference fund
that provides for payments to the Company at the commutation date if experience
under the policy to such date has been favorable, or pro rata reductions from
time to
<PAGE>   36
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

time in the loss reimbursements to the Company if the cumulative return on the
reference fund is less than the return specified in the experience fund.

     A purported class action suit involving policyholders in 32 states has been
filed in a Rhode Island state court against MetLife's subsidiary, Metropolitan
Property and Casualty Insurance Company, with respect to claims by policyholders
for the alleged diminished value of automobiles after accident-related repairs.
A similar "diminished value" allegation was made recently in a Texas Deceptive
Trade Practices Act letter and lawsuit which involve a Metropolitan Property and
Casualty Company policyholder. A purported class action has been filed against
Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company and its subsidiary,
Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company, in Florida by a policyholder alleging
breach of contract and unfair trade practices with respect to Metropolitan
Casualty Insurance Company allowing the use of parts not made by the original
manufacturer to repair damaged automobiles. These suits are in the early stages
of litigation and Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company and
Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company intend to vigorously defend themselves
against these suits. Similar suits have been filed against several other
personal lines property and casualty insurers.

     The United States, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and various hotels and
individuals have sued MetLife Capital Corporation, a former subsidiary of the
Company, seeking damages for clean up costs, natural resource damages, personal
injuries and lost profits and taxes based upon, among other things, a release of
oil from a barge which was being towed by the M/V Emily S. In connection with
the sale of MetLife Capital, the Company acquired MetLife Capital's potential
liability with respect to the M/V Emily S lawsuit. MetLife Capital had entered
into a sale and leaseback financing arrangement with respect to the M/V Emily S.
The plaintiffs have taken the position that MetLife Capital, as the owner of
record of the M/V Emily S, is responsible for all damages caused by the barge,
including the oil spill. The governments of the United States and Puerto Rico
have claimed damages in excess of $150. At a mediation, the action brought by
the United States and Puerto Rico was conditionally settled, provided that the
governments have access to additional sums from a fund contributed to by oil
companies to help remediate oil spills. The Company can provide no assurance
that this action will be settled in this manner.

     Three putative class actions have been filed by Conning Corporation
shareholders alleging that the Company's announced offer to purchase the
publicly-held Conning shares is inadequate and constitutes a breach of fiduciary
duty (see Note 16). The Company believes the actions are without merit, and
expects that they will not materially affect its offer to purchase the shares.

     A civil complaint challenging the fairness of the plan of reorganization
and the adequacy and accuracy of the disclosures to policyholders regarding the
plan has been filed in New York Supreme Court for Kings County on behalf of an
alleged class consisting of the policyholders of MetLife who should have
membership benefits in MetLife and were and are eligible to receive notice, vote
and receive consideration in the demutualization. The complaint seeks to enjoin
or rescind the plan and seeks other relief. The defendants named in the
complaint are MetLife and the individual members of its board of directors and
MetLife, Inc. MetLife believes that the allegations made in the complaint are
wholly without merit, and intends to vigorously contest the complaint.

     Various litigation, claims and assessments against the Company, in addition
to those discussed above and those otherwise provided for in the Company's
consolidated financial statements, have arisen in the course of the Company's
business, including, but not limited to, in connection with its activities as an
insurer, employer, investor, investment advisor and taxpayer. Further, state
insurance regulatory authorities and other Federal and state authorities
regularly
<PAGE>   37
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

make inquiries and conduct investigations concerning the Company's compliance
with applicable insurance and other laws and regulations.

     In some of the matters referred to above, very large and/or indeterminate
amounts, including punitive and treble damages, are sought. While it is not
feasible to predict or determine the ultimate outcome of all pending
investigations and legal proceedings or provide reasonable ranges of potential
losses, it is the opinion of the Company's management that their outcomes, after
consideration of available insurance and reinsurance and the provisions made in
the Company's consolidated financial statements, are not likely to have a
material adverse effect on the Company's consolidated financial position.
However, given the large and/or indeterminate amounts sought in certain of these
matters and the inherent unpredictability of litigation, it is possible that an
adverse outcome in certain matters could, from time to time, have a material
adverse effect on the Company's operating results or cash flows in particular
quarterly or annual periods.

  TRANSFERRED CANADIAN POLICIES

     In July 1998, MetLife sold a substantial portion of its Canadian operations
to Clarica Life. As part of that sale, a large block of policies in effect with
MetLife in Canada were transferred to Clarica Life, and the holders of the
transferred Canadian policies became policyholders of Clarica Life. Those
transferred policyholders are no longer policyholders of MetLife and, therefore,
are not entitled to compensation under the plan of reorganization. However, as a
result of a commitment made in connection with obtaining Canadian regulatory
approval of that sale, if MetLife demutualizes, its Canadian branch will make
cash payments to those who are, or are deemed to be, holders of those
transferred Canadian policies. The payments, which will be recorded in other
expenses in the same period as the effective date of the plan, will be
determined in a manner that is consistent with the treatment of, and fair and
equitable to, eligible policyholders of MetLife. The amount of the payment is
dependent upon the initial public offering price of common stock to be issued on
the effective date of the plan of demutualization.

  YEAR 2000

     The Year 2000 issue was the result of the widespread use of computer
programs written using two digits (rather than four) to define the applicable
year. Such programming was a common industry practice designed to avoid the
significant costs associated with additional mainframe capacity necessary to
accommodate a four-digit field. As a result, any of the Company's computer
systems that have time-sensitive software may recognize a date using "00" as the
year 1900 rather than the year 2000. This could result in major system failures
or miscalculations. The Company has conducted a comprehensive review of its
computer systems to identify the systems that could be affected by the Year 2000
issue and has implemented a plan to resolve the issue. There can be no
assurances that the Year 2000 plan of the Company or that of its vendors or
third parties have resolved all Year 2000 issues. Further, there can be no
assurance that there will not be any future system failure or that such failure,
if any, will not have a material impact on the operations of the Company.

  LEASES

     In accordance with industry practice, certain of the Company's income from
lease agreements with retail tenants is contingent upon the level of the
tenants' sales revenues. Additionally, the Company, as lessee, has entered into
various lease and sublease agreements
<PAGE>   38
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

for office space, data processing and other equipment. Future minimum rental and
subrental income and minimum gross rental payments relating to these lease
agreements were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      GROSS
                                               RENTAL    SUBLEASE     RENTAL
                                               INCOME     INCOME     PAYMENTS
                                               ------    --------    --------
<S>                                            <C>       <C>         <C>
2000.........................................  $  817      $13         $156
2001.........................................     740       12          135
2002.........................................     689       11          111
2003.........................................     612        9           90
2004.........................................     542        9           69
Thereafter...................................   2,032       27          299
</TABLE>

10. INCOME TAXES

     The provision for income taxes was as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                               ------------------------
                                                               1999      1998      1997
                                                               ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                           <C>       <C>       <C>
Current:
  Federal...................................................   $643      $668      $370
  State and local...........................................     24        60        10
  Foreign...................................................      4        99        26
                                                               ----      ----      ----
                                                                671       827       406
                                                               ----      ----      ----
Deferred:
  Federal...................................................    (78)      (25)       28
  State and local...........................................      2        (8)        9
  Foreign...................................................     (2)      (54)       25
                                                               ----      ----      ----
                                                                (78)      (87)       62
                                                               ----      ----      ----
Provision for income taxes..................................   $593      $740      $468
                                                               ====      ====      ====
</TABLE>

     Reconciliations of the income tax provision at the U.S. statutory rate to
the provision for income taxes as reported were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                               ------------------------
                                                               1999      1998      1997
                                                               ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                           <C>       <C>       <C>
Tax provision at U.S. statutory rate........................   $502      $730      $585
Tax effect of:
  Tax exempt investment income..............................    (39)      (40)      (30)
  Surplus tax...............................................    125        18       (40)
  State and local income taxes..............................     18        31        15
  Tax credits...............................................     (5)      (25)      (15)
  Prior year taxes..........................................    (31)        4        (2)
  Sale of businesses........................................     --       (19)      (41)
  Other, net................................................     23        41        (4)
                                                               ----      ----      ----
Provision for income taxes..................................   $593      $740      $468
                                                               ====      ====      ====
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   39
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     Deferred income taxes represent the tax effect of the differences between
the book and tax basis of assets and liabilities. Net deferred income tax assets
and liabilities consisted of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             DECEMBER 31,
                                                           ----------------
                                                            1999      1998
                                                            ----      ----
<S>                                                        <C>       <C>
Deferred income tax assets:
  Policyholder liabilities and receivables...............  $3,042    $3,108
  Net operating losses...................................      72        22
  Net unrealized investment losses.......................     161        --
  Employee benefits......................................     192       174
  Litigation related.....................................     468       312
  Other..................................................     242       158
                                                           ------    ------
                                                            4,177     3,774
  Less: Valuation allowance..............................      72        21
                                                           ------    ------
                                                            4,105     3,753
                                                           ------    ------
Deferred income tax liabilities:
  Investments............................................   1,472     1,529
  Deferred policy acquisition costs......................   1,967     1,887
  Net unrealized investment gains........................      --       864
  Other..................................................      63        18
                                                           ------    ------
                                                            3,502     4,298
                                                           ------    ------
Net deferred income tax asset (liability)................  $  603    $ (545)
                                                           ======    ======
</TABLE>

     Foreign net operating loss carryforwards generated deferred income tax
benefits of $72 and $21 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. The Company
has recorded a valuation allowance related to these tax benefits. The valuation
allowance reflects management's assessment, based on available information, that
it is more likely than not that the deferred income tax asset for foreign net
operating loss carryforwards will not be realized. The benefit will be
recognized when management believes that it is more likely than not that the
portion of the deferred income tax asset is realizable.

     The Company has been audited by the Internal Revenue Service for the years
through and including 1993. The Company is being audited for the years 1994,
1995 and 1996. The Company believes that any adjustments that might be required
for open years will not have a material effect on the Company's consolidated
financial statements.

11. REINSURANCE

     The Company assumes and cedes insurance with other insurance companies. The
Company continually evaluates the financial condition of its reinsurers and
monitors concentration of credit risk in an effort to minimize its exposure to
significant losses from reinsurer insolvencies. The Company is contingently
liable with respect to ceded reinsurance should any reinsurer be unable to meet
its obligations under these agreements. The amounts in the consolidated
statements of income are presented net of reinsurance ceded.

     The Company's life insurance operations participate in reinsurance in order
to limit losses, minimize exposure to large risks and to provide additional
capacity for future growth. During
<PAGE>   40
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

1998, the Company began reinsuring, under yearly renewal term policies, 90
percent of the mortality risk on universal life policies issued after 1983. The
Company also reinsures 90 percent of the mortality risk on term life insurance
policies issued after 1995 under yearly renewal term policies and coinsures 100
percent of the mortality risk in excess of $25 and $35 on single and joint
survivorship policies, respectively.

     During 1997, the Company obtained a 100 percent coinsurance policy to
provide coverage for contractual payments generated by certain portions of the
Company's non-life contingency long-term guaranteed interest contracts and
structured settlement lump sum contracts issued during the periods 1991 through
1993. The policy was amended in 1998 to include structured settlement lump sum
payments issued during the period 1983 through 1990, 1994 and 1995. Reinsurance
recoverables under the contract, which has been accounted for as a financing
transaction, were $1,372 and $1,374 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.

     See Note 9 for information regarding certain excess of loss reinsurance
agreements providing coverage for risks associated primarily with sales
practices claims.

     The Company has exposure to catastrophes, which are an inherent risk of the
property and casualty insurance business and could contribute to material
fluctuations in the Company's results of operations. The Company uses excess of
loss and quota share reinsurance arrangements to limit its maximum loss, provide
greater diversification of risk and minimize exposure to larger risks. The
Company's reinsurance program is designed to limit a catastrophe loss to no more
than 10% of the Auto & Home segment's statutory surplus.

     The effects of reinsurance were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Direct premiums.....................................  $13,249    $12,763    $12,728
Reinsurance assumed.................................      484        409        360
Reinsurance ceded...................................   (1,645)    (1,669)    (1,810)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Net premiums........................................  $12,088    $11,503    $11,278
                                                      =======    =======    =======
Reinsurance recoveries netted against policyholder
  benefits..........................................  $ 1,626    $ 1,744    $ 1,648
                                                      =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

     The effects of reinsurance with GenAmerica Corporation ("GenAmerica") were
as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                            ------------------------
                                                            1999      1998      1997
                                                            ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                         <C>       <C>       <C>
Premiums ceded to GenAmerica..............................  $108      $113      $61
                                                            ====      ====      ===
Reinsurance recoveries from GenAmerica netted against
  policyholder benefits...................................  $ 74      $ 28      $24
                                                            ====      ====      ===
</TABLE>

     Reinsurance recoverables, included in other receivables, were $2,898 and
$3,134 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively, of which $5 and $5,
respectively, were recoverable from GenAmerica. Reinsurance and ceded
commissions payables, included in other liabilities, were $148 and $105 at
December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
<PAGE>   41
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The following provides an analysis of the activity in the liability for
benefits relating to property and casualty and group accident and non-medical
health policies and contracts:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Balance at January 1................................  $ 3,320    $ 3,655    $ 3,345
  Reinsurance recoverables..........................     (233)      (229)      (215)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Net balance at January 1............................    3,087      3,426      3,130
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Acquisition of business.............................      204         --         --
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Incurred related to:
  Current year......................................    3,129      2,726      2,855
  Prior years.......................................      (16)      (245)        88
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                        3,113      2,481      2,943
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Paid related to:
  Current year......................................   (2,128)    (1,967)    (1,832)
  Prior years.......................................     (759)      (853)      (815)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                       (2,887)    (2,820)    (2,647)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Balance at December 31..............................    3,517      3,087      3,426
  Add: Reinsurance recoverables.....................      272        233        229
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Balance at December 31..............................  $ 3,789    $ 3,320    $ 3,655
                                                      =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

12. OTHER EXPENSES

     Other expenses were comprised of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                      -----------------------------
                                                       1999       1998       1997
                                                       ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Compensation........................................  $ 2,590    $ 2,478    $ 2,078
Commissions.........................................      937        902        766
Interest and debt issue costs.......................      405        379        453
Amortization of policy acquisition costs (excludes
  amortization of $(46), $240 and $70, respectively,
  related to realized investment gains and
  (losses)).........................................      862        587        771
Capitalization of policy acquisition costs..........   (1,160)    (1,025)    (1,000)
Rent, net of sublease income........................      239        155        179
Minority interest...................................       55         67         56
Restructuring charge................................       --         81         --
Other...............................................    2,827      4,395      2,468
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                      $ 6,755    $ 8,019    $ 5,771
                                                      =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

     During 1998, the Company recorded charges of $81 to restructure
headquarters operations and consolidate certain agencies and other operations.
These costs have been fully paid at December 31, 1999.
<PAGE>   42
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

13. STATUTORY FINANCIAL INFORMATION

     The reconciliations of MetLife's statutory surplus and net change in
statutory surplus, determined in accordance with accounting practices prescribed
or permitted by insurance regulatory authorities, with equity and net income
determined in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles were as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 DECEMBER 31,
                                                              ------------------
                                                               1999       1998
                                                               ----       ----
<S>                                                           <C>        <C>
Statutory surplus...........................................  $ 7,630    $ 7,388
GAAP adjustments for:
  Future policy benefits and policyholder account
     balances...............................................   (4,167)    (6,830)
  Deferred policy acquisition costs.........................    8,381      6,560
  Deferred income taxes.....................................      886       (190)
  Valuation of investments..................................   (2,102)     3,981
  Statutory asset valuation reserves........................    3,189      3,381
  Statutory interest maintenance reserves...................    1,114      1,486
  Surplus notes.............................................   (1,602)    (1,595)
  Other, net................................................      361        686
                                                              -------    -------
Equity......................................................  $13,690    $14,867
                                                              =======    =======
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                          -------------------------
                                                          1999      1998      1997
                                                          ----      ----      ----
<S>                                                       <C>      <C>       <C>
Net change in statutory surplus.........................  $ 242    $   10    $  227
GAAP adjustments for:
  Future policy benefits and policyholder account
     balances...........................................    556       127       (38)
  Deferred policy acquisition costs.....................    379       224       149
  Deferred income taxes.................................    154       234        62
  Valuation of investments..............................    473     1,158      (387)
  Statutory asset valuation reserves....................   (226)     (461)    1,136
  Statutory interest maintenance reserves...............   (368)      312        53
  Other, net............................................   (593)     (261)        1
                                                          -----    ------    ------
Net income..............................................  $ 617    $1,343    $1,203
                                                          =====    ======    ======
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   43
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

14. OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)

     The following table sets forth the reclassification adjustments required
for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997 to avoid double-counting in
other comprehensive income (loss) items that are included as part of net income
for the current year that have been reported as a part of other comprehensive
income (loss) in the current or prior year:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               1999       1998       1997
                                                               ----       ----       ----
<S>                                                           <C>        <C>        <C>
Holding (losses) gains on investments arising during the
  year......................................................  $(6,314)   $ 1,493    $ 4,257
Income tax effect of holding gains or losses................    2,262       (617)    (1,615)
Transfer of securities from held-to-maturity to
  available-for-sale:
  Holding gains on investments..............................       --         --        198
  Income tax effect.........................................       --         --        (75)
Reclassification adjustments:
  Realized holding (gains) losses included in current year
     net income.............................................       38     (2,013)      (844)
  Amortization of premium and discount on investments.......     (307)      (350)      (209)
  Realized holding (losses) gains allocated to other
     policyholder amounts...................................      (67)       608        231
  Income tax effect.........................................      120        729        312
Allocation of holding losses (gains) on investments relating
  to other policyholder amounts.............................    3,788       (351)    (2,231)
Income tax effect of allocation of holding gains and losses
  to other policyholder amounts.............................   (1,357)       143        846
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Net unrealized investment (losses) gains....................   (1,837)      (358)       870
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Foreign currency translation adjustments arising during the
  year......................................................       50       (115)       (46)
Reclassification adjustment for sale of investment in
  foreign operation.........................................       --          2         (3)
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Foreign currency translation adjustment.....................       50       (113)       (49)
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Minimum pension liability adjustment........................       (7)       (12)        --
                                                              -------    -------    -------
Other comprehensive income (loss)...........................  $(1,794)   $  (483)   $   821
                                                              =======    =======    =======
</TABLE>

15. BUSINESS SEGMENT INFORMATION

     The Company provides insurance and financial services to customers in the
United States, Canada, Central America, South America, Europe and Asia. The
Company's business is divided into six segments: Individual, Institutional, Auto
& Home, International, Asset Management and Corporate. These segments are
managed separately because they either provide different products and services,
require different strategies or have different technology requirements.

     Individual offers a wide variety of individual insurance and investment
products, including life insurance, annuities and mutual funds. Institutional
offers a broad range of group insurance and retirement and savings products and
services, including group life insurance, non-medical health insurance such as
short and long-term disability, long-term care and dental insurance and other
insurance products and services. Auto & Home provides insurance coverages
including private passenger automobile, homeowners and personal excess liability
insurance. International provides life insurance, accident and health insurance,
annuities and retirement and savings
<PAGE>   44
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

products to both individuals and groups, and auto and homeowners coverage to
individuals. Asset Management provides a broad variety of asset management
products and services to individuals and institutions such as mutual funds for
savings and retirement needs, commercial real estate advisory and management
services, and institutional and retail investment management. Through its
Corporate segment, the Company reports items that are not allocated to any of
the business segments.

     Set forth in the tables below is certain financial information with respect
to the Company's operating segments for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998
and 1997. The accounting policies of the segments are the same as those
described in the summary of significant accounting policies, except for the
method of capital allocation. The Company allocates capital to each segment
based upon an internal capital allocation system that allows the Company to more
effectively manage its capital. The Company has divested operations that did not
meet targeted rates of return, including its commercial leasing business
(Corporate segment) and substantial portions of its Canadian operations
(International segment), and insurance operations in the United Kingdom
(International segment). The Company evaluates the performance of each operating
segment based upon income or loss from operations before provision for income
taxes and non-recurring items (e.g. items of unusual or infrequent nature). The
Company allocates non-recurring items (primarily consisting of sales practices
claims and claims for personal injuries caused by exposure to asbestos or
asbestos-containing products) and prior to its sale in 1998, the results of
MetLife Capital Holdings, Inc. to the Corporate segment.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        AUTO
AT OR FOR THE YEAR ENDED                                 &                        ASSET                  CONSOLIDATION/
   DECEMBER 31, 1999      INDIVIDUAL   INSTITUTIONAL    HOME    INTERNATIONAL   MANAGEMENT   CORPORATE    ELIMINATION      TOTAL
- ------------------------  ----------   -------------    ----    -------------   ----------   ---------   --------------    -----
<S>                       <C>          <C>             <C>      <C>             <C>          <C>         <C>              <C>
Premiums................   $  4,289       $ 5,525      $1,751      $  523         $   --      $    --       $    --       $ 12,088
Universal life and
  investment-type
  product policy fees...        888           502          --          48             --           --            --          1,438
Net investment income...      5,346         3,755         103         206             80          605          (279)         9,816
Other revenues..........        558           629          21          12            803           59            72          2,154
Net realized investment
  gains (losses)........        (14)          (31)          1           1             --          (41)           14            (70)
Policyholder benefits
  and claims............      4,625         6,712       1,301         463             --           --             4         13,105
Interest credited to
  policyholder account
  balances..............      1,359         1,030          --          52             --           --            --          2,441
Policyholder
  dividends.............      1,509           159          --          22             --           --            --          1,690
Other expenses..........      2,719         1,589         514         248            795        1,031          (141)         6,755
Income (loss) before
  provision for income
  taxes and
  extraordinary item....        855           890          61           5             88         (408)          (56)         1,435
Income (loss) after
  provision for income
  taxes before
  extraordinary item....        555           567          56          21             51         (358)          (50)           842
Total assets............    109,401        88,127       4,443       4,381          1,036       19,834        (1,990)       225,232
Deferred policy
  acquisition costs.....      8,049           106          93         244             --           --            --          8,492
Separate account
  assets................     28,828        35,236          --         877             --           --            --         64,941
Policyholder
  liabilities...........     72,956        47,781       2,318       2,187             --            6          (293)       124,955
Separate account
  liabilities...........     28,828        35,236          --         877             --           --            --         64,941
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   45
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        AUTO
AT OR FOR THE YEAR ENDED                                 &                        ASSET                  CONSOLIDATION/
   DECEMBER 31, 1998      INDIVIDUAL   INSTITUTIONAL    HOME    INTERNATIONAL   MANAGEMENT   CORPORATE    ELIMINATION      TOTAL
- ------------------------  ----------   -------------    ----    -------------   ----------   ---------   --------------    -----
<S>                       <C>          <C>             <C>      <C>             <C>          <C>         <C>              <C>
Premiums................   $  4,323       $ 5,159      $1,403      $  618         $   --      $    --       $    --       $ 11,503
Universal life and
  investment-type
  product policy fees...        817           475          --          68             --           --            --          1,360
Net investment income...      5,480         3,885          81         343             75          682          (318)        10,228
Other revenues..........        474           575          36          33            817          111           (52)         1,994
Net realized investment
  gains.................        659           557         122         117             --          679          (113)         2,021
Policyholder benefits
  and claims............      4,606         6,416       1,029         597             --          (10)           --         12,638
Interest credited to
  policyholder account
  balances..............      1,423         1,199          --          89             --           --            --          2,711
Policyholder
  dividends.............      1,445           142          --          64             --           --            --          1,651
Other expenses..........      2,577         1,613         386         352            799        2,601          (309)         8,019
Income (loss) before
  provision for income
  taxes and
  extraordinary item....      1,702         1,281         227          77             93       (1,119)         (174)         2,087
Income (loss) after
  provision for income
  taxes before
  extraordinary item....      1,069           846         161          56             49         (691)         (143)         1,347
Total assets............    103,614        88,741       2,763       3,432          1,164       20,852        (5,220)       215,346
Deferred policy
  acquisition costs.....      6,194            82          57         205             --           --            --          6,538
Separate account
  assets................     23,013        35,029          --          26             --           --            --         58,068
Policyholder
  liabilities...........     71,571        49,406       1,477       2,043             --            1          (295)       124,203
Separate account
  liabilities...........     23,013        35,029          --          26             --           --            --         58,068
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         AUTO
AT OR FOR THE YEAR ENDED                                  &                        ASSET                  CONSOLIDATION/
    DECEMBER 31, 1997      INDIVIDUAL   INSTITUTIONAL    HOME    INTERNATIONAL   MANAGEMENT   CORPORATE    ELIMINATION      TOTAL
- ------------------------   ----------   -------------    ----    -------------   ----------   ---------   --------------    -----
<S>                        <C>          <C>             <C>      <C>             <C>          <C>         <C>              <C>
Premiums.................   $ 4,327        $ 4,689      $1,354      $  908         $   --      $    --       $    --       $ 11,278
Universal life and
  investment-type product
  policy fees............       855            426          --         137             --           --            --          1,418
Net investment income....     4,754          3,754          71         504             78          700          (370)         9,491
Other revenues...........       338            357          25          54            682           19            16          1,491
Net realized investment
  gains..................       356             45           9         142             --          326           (91)           787
Policyholder benefits and
  claims.................     4,597          5,934       1,003         869             --           --            --         12,403
Interest credited to
  policyholder account
  balances...............     1,422          1,319          --         137             --           --            --          2,878
Policyholder dividends...     1,340            305          --          97             --           --            --          1,742
Other expenses...........     2,394          1,178         351         497            679          966          (294)         5,771
Income before provision
  for income taxes.......       877            535         105         145             81           79          (151)         1,671
Income after provision
  for income taxes.......       599            339          74         126             45          163          (143)         1,203
Total assets.............    95,323         83,473       2,542       7,412          1,136       18,641        (5,745)       202,782
Deferred policy
  acquisition costs......     5,912             40          56         428             --           --            --          6,436
Separate account assets..    17,345         30,473          --         520             --           --            --         48,338
Policyholder
  liabilities............    70,686         49,547       1,509       5,615             --            1            --        127,358
Separate account
  liabilities............    17,345         30,473          --         520             --           --            --         48,338
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   46
                      METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)

     The Individual segment includes an equity ownership interest in Nvest
Companies, L.P. ("Nvest") under the equity method of accounting. Nvest has been
included within the Asset Management segment due to the types of products and
strategies employed by the entity. The individual segment's equity in earnings
of Nvest, which is included in net investment income, was $48, $49 and $45 for
the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively. The investment
in Nvest was $196, $252 and $216 at December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997,
respectively.

     Net investment income and net realized investment gains are based upon the
actual results of each segment's specifically identifiable asset portfolio.
Other costs and operating costs were allocated to each of the segments based
upon: (1) a review of the nature of such costs, (2) time studies analyzing the
amount of employee compensation costs incurred by each segment, and (3) cost
estimates included in the Company's product pricing.

     The consolidation/elimination column includes the elimination of all
intersegment amounts and the Individual segment's ownership interest in Nvest.
The principal component of the intersegment amounts related to intersegment
loans, which bore interest at rates commensurate with related borrowings.

     Revenues derived from any customer did not exceed 10% of consolidated
revenues. Revenues from U.S. operations were $24,637, $25,643 and $22,664 for
the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively, which
represented 97%, 96% and 93%, respectively, of consolidated revenues.

16. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

     On January 6, 2000, the Company acquired GenAmerica for $1.2 billion. In
connection with this acquisition, the Company incurred $900 of short-term debt.
GenAmerica is a holding company which includes General American Life Insurance
Company, 48.3% of the outstanding shares of Reinsurance Group of America ("RGA")
common stock, a provider of reinsurance, and 61.0% of the outstanding shares of
Conning Corporation common stock, an asset manager. On January 18, 2000, the
Company announced that it had proposed to acquire all of the outstanding shares
of Conning common stock not already owned by it for $10.50 per share in cash, or
approximately $55. At December 31, 1999, the Company owned 9.6% of the
outstanding shares of RGA common stock which were acquired on November 24, 1999
for $125. Subsequent to the GenAmerica acquisition, the Company owned 57.9% of
the outstanding shares of RGA common stock. Total assets, revenues and net loss
of GenAmerica were $23,594, $3,916 and $(174), respectively, at or for the year
ended December 31, 1999.

     As part of the acquisition agreement, in September 1999 the Company assumed
$5,752 of General American Life funding agreements and received cash of $1,926
and investment assets with a market value of $3,826. In October 1999, as part of
the assumption arrangement, the holders of General American Life funding
agreements aggregating $5,136 elected to have the Company redeem the funding
agreements for cash. General American Life agreed to pay the Company a fee of
$120 in connection with the assumption of the funding agreements. The fee will
be considered as part of the purchase price to be allocated to the fair value of
assets and liabilities acquired. The Company also agreed to make a capital
contribution of $120 to General American Life after the completion of the
acquisition.

     At the date of the acquisition agreement, the Company and GenAmerica were
parties to a number of reinsurance agreements. In addition, as part of the
acquisition, the Company entered into agreements effective as of July 25, 1999,
which coinsured new and certain existing business of General American Life and
some of its affiliates. See Note 11.

<PAGE>

                                    PART II

                      CONTENTS OF REGISTRATION STATEMENT

                REPRESENTATION WITH RESPECT TO FEES AND CHARGES

  Metropolitan Life represents that the fees and charges deducted under the
Policies offered and sold pursuant to this amended Registration Statement, in
the aggregate, are reasonable in relation to the services rendered, the
expenses to be incurred, and the risks assumed by Metropolitan Life under the
Policies. Metropolitan Life bases its representation on its assessment of all
of the facts and circumstances, including such relevant factors as: the nature
and extent of such services, expenses and risks, the need for Metropolitan
Life to earn a profit, the degree to which the Policies include innovative
features, and regulatory standards for exemptive relief under the Investment
Company Act of 1940 used prior to October 1996, including the range of
industry practice. This representation applies to all policies issued pursuant
to this Registration Statement, including those sold on the terms specifically
described in the prospectuses contained herein, or any variations therein
based on supplements, amendments, endorsements or other riders to such
policies or prospectuses, or otherwise.

  This Registration Statement comprises the following papers and documents:

    The facing sheet.

    Cross-Reference Table.

    UL2001 Prospectus consisting of 112 pages.

    UL11 Prospectus consisting of 108 pages.

    Undertaking to File Reports (filed with the initial filing of this
    Registration Statement on May 14, 1992.)

    Undertaking pursuant to Rule 484(b)(1) under the Securities Act of 1933
    (filed with the initial filing of this Registration Statement on May
    14, 1992.)

    Representation with respect to fees and charges.

    The signatures.

    Written Consents of the following persons:

     Company Actuary (filed with Exhibit 6 below).

     Independent Auditors

    The following exhibits:

<TABLE>
     <C>      <S>                                                           <C>
      1.A (1) --Resolution of Board of Directors of Metropolitan Life
               effecting the establishment of Metropolitan Life Separate
               Account UL.................................................  ++++
          (2) --Not Applicable
          (3) --(a) Not Applicable
              --(b) Form of Selected Broker Agreement.....................  ++++
              --(c) Schedule of Sales Commissions.........................   ++
          (4) --Not applicable
          (5) --(a) (i) Specimen Old Product Flexible Premium Multifunded
                     Life Insurance Policy (including application and any
                     alternate pages as required by state law) with form
                     of riders, if any....................................  ++++
                    (ii) Specimen New Product Flexible Premium Multifunded
                     Life Insurance Policy (including application and any
                     alternate pages required by state law) with form of
                     riders...............................................   *
              --(b) Riders for Disability Waiver Rider, and Accidental
                    Death Benefit.........................................  ++++
</TABLE>


                                     II-1
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
     <C>  <S>                                                            <C>
          --(c) Riders for Accelerated Death Benefit, Children's Term
                Insurance Benefit and Spouse Term Insurance Benefit...    ++++
          --(d) New York Endorsement for Old Product to Flexible
                Premium Multifunded Life Insurance Policy.............    ++++
          --(e) Additional alternate pages for Old Product required by
                state law.............................................    ++++
          --(f) Endorsement adding death benefit Option C for Old
                Product...............................................    ++++
          --(g) Forms of illustrations................................     **
     (6)  --(a)  Restated Charter and By-Laws of Metropolitan Life....     +
     (7)  --Not Applicable
     (8)  --Not Applicable
     (9)  --Not Applicable
      2.  --See Exhibit 1.A(5) above
      3.  --Opinion and consent of Counsel as to the legality of the
           securities being registered................................   ++++++
      4.  --Not Applicable
      5.  --Not Applicable
      6.a --Opinion and consent of Marian Zeldin relating to the
           Flexible Premium Multifunded Life Insurance Policies ......     +
      8.  --Powers of Attorney........................................   +++++
      9.  --Method of Computing Exchange pursuant to Rule
           6e-3(T)(b)(13)(v)(B) under the Investment Company Act of
           1940 (not required because there will be no cash value
           adjustments)
     11.  --Memoranda describing certain procedures filed pursuant to
           Rule
           6e-3(T)(b)(12)(iii)........................................    ++++
     27.  --Financial Data Schedule (inapplicable)
</TABLE>
- --------

      + Filed herewith. Exhibit 1.A(6)(a) contingent on the successful
        completion of the conversion of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
        from a mutual life insurance company to a stock life insurance company
        contemplated to take effect on Friday, April 7, 2000.

     ++ Incorporated by reference from "Distribution of the Policies" in the
        Prospectuses included herein.
    +++ Incorporated by reference to the filing of Post-Effective Amendment
        No. 4 to the Registration Statement of Separate Account UL (File No.
        33-57320) on March 1, 1996.
   ++++ Included in the filing of Post-Effective Amendment No. 5 to this
        Registration Statement on April 30, 1997.

  +++++ Included in the filing of Post-Effective Amendment No. 5 to this
        Registration Statement on April 30, 1997 except for Robert H.
        Benmosche's power of attorney, which is incorporated by reference to
        the Registration Statement of Separate Account UL (File No. 333-40161)
        filed on November 13, 1997, Stewart G. Nagler's power of attorney
        which is included in the filing of Post-Effective Amendment No. 6 to
        this Registration Statement on December 23, 1997, Virginia M. Wilson's
        power of attorney, which is incorporated by reference to Pre-Effective
        Amendment No. 2 to the Registration Statement of Metropolitan Life
        Separate Account E (File No. 333-80547) filed on November 1, 1999, and
        William C. Steere's power of attorney, which is incorporated by
        reference to the filing of Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 of Separate
        Account UL (File no. 33-57320) on April 23, 1999.
 ++++++ Included in the filing of Post-Effective Amendment No. 6 to this
        Registration Statement on December 23, 1997.

      * Included in the filing of Post-Effective Amendment No. 7 to this
        Registration Statement on February 27, 1998.

     ** Included in the filing of Post-Effective Amendment No. 10 to this
        Registration Statement on April 2, 1999.

                                     II-2
<PAGE>

                                  SIGNATURES

  Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, METROPOLITAN
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, certifies that it meets all of the requirements for
effectiveness of this amended Registration Statement pursuant to Rule 485(b)
under the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly caused this amended Registration
Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly
authorized, and its seal to be hereunto affixed and attested, all in the City
of New York, State of New York, this 5th day of April, 2000.

                                          METROPOLITAN LIFE
                                           INSURANCE COMPANY
(Seal)

                                                    /s/ Gary A. Beller
                                          By: _________________________________
                                                      Gary A. Beller
                                             Senior Executive Vice-President &
                                                      General Counsel

         /s/ Cheryl D. Martino
Attest: _____________________________
           Cheryl D. Martino
          Assistant Secretary

  Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this amended
Registration Statement has been signed below by the following persons in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.

              Signature                        Title                 Date



*                                      Chairman of the
- -------------------------------------   Board, President
         Robert H. Benmosche            and Chief Executive
                                        Officer and
                                        Director (Principal
                                        Executive Officer)

*                                      Vice-Chairman of the
- -------------------------------------   Board and Chief
            Gerald Clark                Investment Officer
                                        and Director

*                                      Vice-Chairman of the
- -------------------------------------   Board and Chief
          Stewart G. Nagler             Financial Officer
                                        (Principal
                                        Financial Officer)

*                                      Senior Vice-
- -------------------------------------   President and
                                        Controller
       Virginia M. Wilson               (Principal
                                        Accounting Officer)

*                                      Director
- -------------------------------------
         Curtis H. Barnette

*                                      Director
- -------------------------------------
          Joan Ganz Cooney


     /s/ Christopher P. Nicholas
*By _________________________________                           April 5, 2000
    Christopher P. Nicholas, Esq.
          Attorney-in-fact


                                     II-3
<PAGE>

              Signature                         Title                Date

*                                       Director
- -------------------------------------
         Burton A. Dole, Jr.

*                                       Director
- -------------------------------------
          James R. Houghton

*                                       Director
- -------------------------------------
          Helene L. Kaplan

*                                       Director
- -------------------------------------
         Charles M. Leighton

*                                       Director
- -------------------------------------
           Allen E. Murray

*                                       Director
- -------------------------------------
         John J. Phelan, Jr.

*                                       Director
- -------------------------------------
            Hugh B. Price

*                                       Director
- -------------------------------------
         Robert G. Schwartz

*                                       Director
- -------------------------------------
       Ruth J. Simmons, Ph.D.

                                        Director
*
- -------------------------------------
       William C. Steere, Jr.

     /s/ Christopher P. Nicholas
*By _________________________________                           April 5, 2000
    Christopher P. Nicholas, Esq.
          Attorney-in-fact

                                      II-4
<PAGE>


  Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the Registrant,
METROPOLITAN LIFE SEPARATE ACCOUNT UL, certifies that it meets all of the
requirements for effectiveness of this amended Registration Statement pursuant
to Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly caused this
amended Registration Statement to be signed, on its behalf by the undersigned
thereunto duly authorized, and its seal to be hereunto affixed and attested,
all in the City of New York, State of New York this 5th day of April, 2000.

                                          METROPOLITAN LIFE SEPARATE ACCOUNT
                                          UL
                                            (Registrant)

                                            By: METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE
                                                COMPANY
                                                   (Depositor)


(Seal)                                                 /s/ Gary A. Beller
                                              By: _____________________________
                                                         Gary A. Beller
                                                     Senior Executive Vice-
                                                           President
                                                      and General Counsel

         /s/ Cheryl D. Martino
Attest: _____________________________
           Cheryl D. Martino
          Assistant Secretary

                                     II-5
<PAGE>

                         INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' CONSENT

Metropolitan Life Insurance Company:

  We consent to the use in this Post-Effective Amendment No. 11 to the
Registration Statement No. 33-47927 of Metropolitan Life Separate Account UL
on Form S-6 of our report dated March 27, 2000 relating to Metropolitan Life
Separate Account UL appearing in the Prospectus, which is a part of such
Registration Statement, and our report dated February 7, 2000, relating to
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company also appearing in the Prospectus, and to
the reference to us under the heading "Legal, Accounting and Actuarial
Matters" in such Prospectus.

/s/ DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP

Deloitte & Touche LLP
New York, New York

April 3, 2000

                                     II-6

<PAGE>

                                                               Exhibit 1.A(6)(a)


                         AMENDED AND RESTATED CHARTER OF
                       METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                                      Under
                   Sections 1206 and 7312 of the Insurance Law
                 and Section 807 of the Business Corporation Law


           The undersigned, being the Chairman of the Board, President and Chief
Executive Officer and the Secretary of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company,
respectively, hereby certify that:

           1. The name of the corporation is Metropolitan Life Insurance
Company.
           2. The corporation was incorporated on May 4, 1866 under the name
"National Travelers Insurance Company." The name of the corporation was changed
to "Metropolitan Life Insurance Company" on March 24, 1868.

           3. The Charter of the corporation is hereby amended, as authorized by
Sections 1206 and 7312 of the Insurance Law of New York (the "Insurance Law")
and Section 801 of the Business Corporation Law of New York, in connection with
the reorganization of the corporation from a mutual life insurance company to a
stock life insurance company pursuant to Section 7312 of the Insurance Law (a)
to establish the capital of the corporation in the amount of $10,000,000 and to
authorize shares of Common Stock, par value $.01 per share, as the shares of the
corporation, (b) to change references in the Charter from "mutual" to "stock"
and from "policyholders" to "shareholders", and (c) to eliminate classes of
directors and to provide that each director will be elected for a one-year term.

           4. The amendment and restatement of the Charter was authorized by the
affirmative vote of at least two-thirds of all votes cast on ________, 1999 by
policyholders entitled to vote on the plan of reorganization of the corporation
pursuant to Section 7312 of the Insurance Law.

           5. The text of the Charter, as amended by the filing of this Amended
and Restated Charter, is hereby restated to read in full as follows:
<PAGE>

                                   ARTICLE I

                                 CORPORATE NAME

           The name of the corporation shall continue to be "Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company." The corporation may use, in the transaction of any or all of
its business and affairs in Canada, including the exercise of any or all of its
rights, such name or such name expressed in the French language. Such name when
so expressed shall be "La Metropolitaine, compagnie d'assurance vie."


                                   ARTICLE II

                                PLACE OF BUSINESS

           The corporation shall be located and have its principal place of
business in the Borough of Manhattan, City of New York, County of New York, and
State of New York.

                                  ARTICLE III

                         ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

           The annual meeting of the shareholders of the corporation for the
election of directors and for the transaction of such other business as properly
may come before such meeting shall be held on the fourth Tuesday of April, or
otherwise, within 60 days thereafter, as the Board may determine, provided that
the Superintendent of Insurance of the State of New York (or any governmental
officer, body or authority that succeeds the Superintendent as the primary
regulator of the corporation's insurance business under applicable law) is given
notice of the date determined by the Board prior to such date, at such place,
either within or without the State of New York, as may be fixed from time to
time by resolution of the Board and set forth in the notice or waiver of notice
of the meeting.


                                      D-2
<PAGE>

                                   ARTICLE IV

                           BUSINESS OF THE CORPORATION

           The business of the corporation and the kinds of insurance to be
undertaken by it are:

           (1)        "life insurance," meaning every insurance upon the lives
                      of human beings, and every insurance appertaining thereto,
                      including the granting of endowment benefits, additional
                      benefits in the event of death by accident, additional
                      benefits to safeguard the contract from lapse, accelerated
                      payments of part or all of the death benefit or a special
                      surrender value upon diagnosis (A) of terminal illness
                      defined as a life expectancy of twelve months or less, or
                      (B) of a medical condition requiring extraordinary medical
                      care or treatment regardless of life expectancy, or upon
                      (C) certification by a licensed health care practitioner
                      of any condition which requires continuous care for the
                      remainder of the insured's life in an eligible facility or
                      at home when the insured is chronically ill as defined by
                      Section 7702(B) of the Internal Revenue Code and
                      regulations thereunder, provided the accelerated payments
                      qualify under Section 101(g)(3) of the Internal Revenue
                      Code and all other applicable sections of federal law in
                      order to maintain favorable tax treatment or provide a
                      special surrender value, upon total and permanent
                      disability of the insured, and optional modes of
                      settlement of proceeds. "Life insurance" also includes
                      additional benefits to safeguard the contract against
                      lapse in the event of unemployment of the insured. Amounts
                      paid the insurer for life insurance and proceeds applied
                      under optional modes of settlement or under dividend
                      options may be allocated by the insurer to one or more
                      separate accounts pursuant to Section 4240 of the
                      Insurance Law;

           (2)        "annuities," meaning all agreements to make periodical
                      payments for a period certain or where the making or
                      continuance of all or some of a series of such payments,
                      or the amount of any such payment, depends upon the
                      continuance of human life, except payments made under the
                      authority of paragraph one hereof. Amounts paid the
                      insurer to provide annuities and proceeds applied under
                      optional modes of settlement or under dividend options may
                      be allocated by the insurer to one or more separate
                      accounts pursuant to Section 4240 of the Insurance Law;
                      and


                                      D-3
<PAGE>

           (3)        "accident and health insurance," meaning (i) insurance
                      against death or personal injury by accident or by any
                      specified kind or kinds of accident and insurance against
                      sickness, ailment or bodily injury, including insurance
                      providing disability benefits pursuant to article nine of
                      the workers' compensation law, except as specified in item
                      (ii) hereof; and (ii) non-cancellable disability
                      insurance, meaning insurance against disability resulting
                      from sickness, ailment or bodily injury (but excluding
                      insurance solely against accidental injury) under any
                      contract which does not give the insurer the option to
                      cancel or otherwise terminate the contract at or after one
                      year from its effective date or renewal date.

as heretofore authorized by and under this Charter and paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of
Section 1113(a) of the Insurance Law; together with such reinsurance business
(in addition to reinsurance of the kinds of insurance business hereinabove
stated) as may be permitted to the corporation by Section 1114 of said Law;
together with such business in which the corporation may be authorized to engage
pursuant to any amendment to paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of Section 1113(a) or Section
1114 of said Law which may be hereafter adopted; and together with any other
kind or kinds of business to the extent reasonably ancillary or necessarily or
properly incidental to the kinds of insurance business which the corporation is
so authorized to do.

           The corporation shall also have the general rights, powers and
privileges now or hereafter granted by the Insurance Law or any other law to
stock life insurance companies having power to do the kinds of business
hereinabove referred to and any and all other rights, powers and privileges of a
corporation, as the same may now or hereafter be declared by applicable law.


                                   ARTICLE V

                                CORPORATE POWERS

           Section 1. The business of the corporation shall be managed under the
direction of its Board, by committees thereof and by such officers and agents as
the Board or such committees may empower.


                                      D-4
<PAGE>

           Section 2. The Board shall consist of not less than thirteen
directors (except for vacancies temporarily unfilled) nor more than thirty
directors, as may be determined by the Board by resolution adopted by a majority
of the authorized number of directors immediately prior to such determination.
Not less than one- third of the directors shall be persons who are not officers
or employees of the corporation or of any entity controlling, controlled by, or
under common control with the corporation, and who are not beneficial owners of
a controlling interest in the voting stock of the corporation or any such entity
("Outside Directors").

           Section 3. The Board shall have power to make and prescribe such
ByLaws, rules and regulations for the transaction of the business of the
corporation and the conduct of its affairs, not inconsistent with the laws of
the State of New York and this Charter as may be deemed expedient, and to amend
or repeal such By-Laws, rules and regulations, except as otherwise provided in
such By-Laws.

           Section 4. The Board shall have the power to declare by by-law what
number of directors shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business;
provided, however, that such number shall be no less than a majority of the
authorized number of directors, at least one of whom shall be an Outside
Director.

           Section 5. The Board shall elect or appoint a Chairman, a Chief
Executive Officer, a President, one or more Vice-Presidents, a Chief Financial
Officer, a Secretary, a Treasurer, a Controller and a General Counsel and such
other officers as it may deem appropriate, except that officers of the rank of
Vice-President and below may be elected or appointed by the Compensation
Committee of the Board. Officers shall have such powers and perform such duties
as may be authorized by the By-Laws or by or pursuant to authorization of the
Board or the Chief Executive Officer.


                                      D-5
<PAGE>

                                   ARTICLE VI

                       ELECTION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

           Section 1. The directors of the corporation shall be elected by the
shareholders as prescribed by law and the By-Laws of the corporation. The
officers of the corporation shall be elected or appointed as provided in the
By-Laws of the corporation. Each director shall be at least 18 years old, at all
times a majority of the directors shall be citizens and residents of the United
States and not less than three shall be residents of the State of New York.

           Section 2. Vacancies in the Board, including vacancies resulting
from any increase in the authorized number of directors or the removal of any
director, except a removal of a director without cause, shall be filled by a
vote of the Board until the next annual meeting of shareholders of the
corporation, except that if the number of directors then in office is less than
a quorum, such vacancies may be filled by a vote of a majority of directors then
in office.


                                  ARTICLE VII

                             LIABILITY OF DIRECTORS

           No director shall be personally liable to the corporation or any of
its shareholders or any of its policyholders for damages for any breach of duty
as a director; provided, however, that the foregoing provision shall not
eliminate or limit:

           (i)        the liability of a director if a judgment or other final
                      adjudication adverse to the director establishes that the
                      director personally gained in fact a financial profit or
                      other advantage to which he or she was not legally
                      entitled or establishes that the director's acts or
                      omissions were in bad faith or involved intentional
                      misconduct or were acts or omissions (a) which the
                      director knew or reasonably should have known violated the
                      Insurance Law or (b) which violated a specific


                                      D-6
<PAGE>

                      standard of care imposed on directors directly, and not by
                      reference, by a provision of the Insurance Law (or any
                      regulations promulgated thereunder), or (c) which
                      constituted a knowing violation of any other law; or

           (11)       the liability of a director for any act or omission prior
                      to April 26, 1990.


                                  ARTICLE VIII

                                      STOCK

           The amount of capital of the corporation shall be $10,000,000 and
shall consist of 1,000,000,000 authorized shares of Common Stock, par value $.01
per share.

                                   ARTICLE IX

                                    DURATION

           The duration of the corporation shall be perpetual.


                                      D-7
<PAGE>

                              AMENDED AND RESTATED
                 BY-LAWS OF METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY


                                    ARTICLE I

                                  SHAREHOLDERS

           Section 1.1 Annual Meetings. The annual meeting of the shareholders
of the corporation for the election of directors and for the transaction of such
other business as properly may come before such meeting shall be held on the
fourth Tuesday of April, or otherwise, within 60 days thereafter, as the Board
may determine, provided that the Superintendent of Insurance of the State of New
York (or any governmental officer, body or authority that succeeds the
Superintendent as the primary regulator of the corporation's insurance business
under applicable law) is given notice of the date determined by the Board prior
to such date, at such place, either within or without the State of New York, as
may be fixed from time to time by resolution of the Board and set forth in the
notice or waiver of notice of the meeting.

           Section 1.2 Special Meetings. Special meetings of the shareholders
may be called at any time by the Chief Executive Officer (or, in the event of
such Chief Executive Officer's absence or disability, by the President), or by
the Board. A special meeting shall be called by the Chief Executive Officer (or,
in the event of such Chief Executive Officer's absence or disability, by the
President), or by the Secretary, immediately upon receipt of a written request
therefor by shareholders holding in the aggregate not less than 25% of the
outstanding shares of the corporation at the time entitled to vote at any
meeting of the shareholders, which request shall state the purpose or purposes
of such meeting. If such officers shall fail to call such meeting within 20 days
after receipt of such request, any shareholder executing such request may call
such meeting. Such special meetings of the shareholders shall be held at such
places, within or without the State of New York, as shall be specified in the
respective notices or waivers of notice thereof.

           Section 1.3 Notice of Meetings. The Secretary or any Assistant
Secretary shall cause written notice of the place, date and hour of each meeting
of the shareholders, and, in the case of a special meeting, the purpose or
purposes for which such meeting is called and by or at whose direction such
notice is being issued, to be given personally or by first class mail, not fewer
than ten nor more than sixty days before the date of the meeting.


                                      G-1

                                                    Amended and Restated By-Laws
                                             Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
<PAGE>

           No notice of any meeting of shareholders need be given to any
shareholder who submits a signed waiver of notice, in person or by proxy,
whether before or after the meeting. Neither the business to be transacted at,
nor the purpose of, any regular or special meeting of the shareholders need be
specified in a written waiver of notice. The attendance of any shareholder, in
person or by proxy, at a meeting of shareholders shall constitute a waiver of
notice of such meeting, except when the shareholder attends a meeting for the
express purpose of objecting, prior to the conclusion of the meeting, to the
transaction of any business on the ground that the meeting is not lawfully
called or convened.

           Section 1.4 Quorum. Except as otherwise required by law or by the
Charter, the presence in person or by proxy of the holders of record of a
majority of the votes of shares entitled to vote at any meeting of shareholders
shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business at such meeting. When
a quorum is once present to organize a meeting, it is not broken by the
subsequent withdrawal of any shareholders.

           Section 1.5 Voting. Every holder of record of shares entitled to vote
at a meeting of shareholders shall be entitled to one vote for each share
standing in such shareholder's name on the books of the corporation on the
record date set therefor. Except as otherwise required by law or by the Charter
or by Section 1.7 hereof (regarding the election of directors), any corporate
action shall be authorized by a majority of the votes cast in favor of or
against such action by the holder of record of shares represented at any meeting
at which a quorum is present. An abstention shall not constitute a vote cast.

           Section 1.6 Proxies. Every shareholder entitled to vote at any
meeting of the shareholders or to express consent to or dissent from corporate
action without a meeting may, in any legally valid manner, authorize another
person or persons to vote at any such meeting and express such consent or
dissent for such shareholder by proxy. No such proxy shall be voted or acted
upon after the expiration of eleven months from the date of such proxy, unless
such proxy provides for a longer period. Every proxy shall be revocable at the
pleasure of the shareholder executing it, except in those cases where applicable
law provides that a proxy shall be irrevocable.

           Section 1.7 Election and Term of Directors. The directors shall be
elected at each annual meeting of the shareholders to hold office until the next
annual meeting of shareholders. Each director shall hold office until the
expiration of the term for which he or she is elected and until such director's
successor has been duly elected and qualified, or until his or her earlier
death, resignation or removal. At each annual meeting of the share holders of
the corporation, at which a quorum is present, the directors shall be elected by
a plurality of the votes cast by the holders of shares entitled to vote in such
election.


                                      G-2

                                                    Amended and Restated By-Laws
                                             Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
<PAGE>

           Section 1.8 Organization; Procedure. The Board shall determine whom
from among the officer directors shall preside at the meeting of shareholders.
The order of business and all other matters of procedure at every meeting of
shareholders may be determined by such presiding officer. The Secretary, or in
the event of the Secretary's absence or disability, an Assistant Secretary or,
in the Assistant Secretary's absence, an appointee of the presiding officer,
shall act as Secretary of the meeting.

           Section 1.9 Consent of Shareholders in Lieu of Meeting. Whenever the
vote of shareholders at a meeting thereof is required or permitted to be taken
for or in connection with any corporate action, by law, by the Charter or by
these By-Laws, the meeting and vote of shareholders may be dispensed with, if
all of the shareholders who would have been entitled to vote upon the action if
such meeting were held shall consent in writing to such corporate action being
taken.


                                   ARTICLE II

                               BOARD OF DIRECTORS

           Section 2.1 Regular Board Meetings. Regular meetings of the Board for
the transaction of any business shall be held at such times and places, either
within or without the State of New York, as may be fixed from time to time by
resolution of the Board; provided, however, that at least one regular meeting of
the Board shall be held in each calendar year. One regular meeting of the Board
in each calendar year shall be designated as the Annual Organization Meeting.
Except as otherwise required by law or these ByLaws, notice of regular meetings
need not be given.

           Section 2.2 Special Board Meetings, Waiver of Notice. Special
meetings of the Board shall be held whenever called by the chief executive
officer or by any three directors. Notice of each such special meeting shall be
mailed to each director at such director's residence or usual place of business
or other address filed with the Secretary for such purpose, or shall be sent to
such director by any form of telecommunication, or be delivered or given to such
director personally or by telephone, not later than the second day preceding the
day on which such meeting is to be held. Notice of any meeting of the Board need
not, however, be given to any director who submits a signed waiver of notice,
whether before or after the meeting, or who attends the meeting without
protesting, prior thereto or at its commencement, the lack of notice. Every such
notice shall state the time, place and purpose of the meeting.

           Section 2.3 Participation by Telephone. Any one or more members of
the Board or any committee thereof may participate in any meeting of the Board
or such committee by means of a conference telephone or similar communications
equipment allowing all persons participating in the meeting to hear each other
at the same time.


                                      G-3

                                                    Amended and Restated By-Laws
                                             Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
<PAGE>

Participation by such means shall constitute presence in person at a meeting of
the Board or such committee for quorum and voting purposes.

           Section 2.4 Action Without a Meeting. Any action which is required or
permitted to be taken by the Board or any committee thereof may be taken without
a meeting if all members of the Board or such committee consent in writing to
the adoption of a resolution authorizing the action; provided, however, that the
Annual Organization Meeting of the Board may not be conducted by such unanimous
written consent. The resolution and the written consents thereto by the members
of the Board or such committee shall be filed with the minutes of the
proceedings of the Board or committee.

           Section 2.5 Number, Quorum and Adjournments. The Board shall consist
of not less than thirteen directors (except for vacancies temporarily unfilled)
nor more than thirty directors, as may be determined by the Board by resolution
adopted by a majority of the authorized number of directors immediately prior to
any such determination. The authorized number of directors of the corporation
may be increased or decreased at any time by a vote of the majority of the
authorized number of directors immediately prior to such vote; provided,
however, that no such decrease in the authorized number of directors shall
shorten the term of any incumbent director. Not less than one-third of the
directors shall be persons who are not officers or employees of the corporation
or of any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the
corporation and who are not beneficial owners of a controlling interest in the
voting stock of the corporation or any such entity ("Outside Directors"). At any
meeting of the Board, the presence of at least a majority of the authorized
number of directors, at least one of whom shall be an Outside Director, shall
constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. Except as otherwise
provided by law or these By-Laws, the vote of a majority of the directors
present at the time of the vote, if a quorum is present at such time, shall be
the act of the Board. A majority of the directors present, whether or not a
quorum shall be present, may adjourn any meeting. Notice of the time and place
of an adjourned meeting of the Board shall be given if and as determined by a
majority of the directors present at the time of the adjournment.

           Section 2.6 Presiding Officer. The Board shall determine whom from
among the officer directors shall preside at meetings of the Board. In the event
of the absence or disability of all such officer directors, the Board shall
select one of its members present to preside.

           Section 2.7 Board Vacancies. Any vacancy in the Board, including any
vacancy resulting from any increase in the authorized number of directors or the
removal of any director, except a removal of a director without cause, shall be
filled by a vote of the Board until the next annual meeting of shareholders of
the corporation and until such director's successor shall have been elected and
qualified; provided, however, that if the


                                      G-4

                                                    Amended and Restated By-Laws
                                             Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
<PAGE>

number of directors then in office is less than a quorum, any vacancy may be
filled by a vote of a majority of directors then in office.


                                   ARTICLE III

                                   COMMITTEES

           Section 3.1 Standing Committees. The Board shall have the following
standing committees, each consisting of not less than five directors, as shall
be determined by the Board:

                Executive Committee
                Investment Committee
                Compensation Committee
                Audit Committee
                Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee

           Section 3.2 Designation of Members and Chairmen of Standing
Committees. At its first meeting following the annual meeting of shareholders of
the corporation, the Board shall, by resolution adopted by a majority of the
then authorized number of directors, designate from among the directors the
members of the standing committees and from among the members of each such
committee a chairman thereof, which members shall serve as such, at the pleasure
of the Board, so long as they shall continue in office as directors, until the
meeting following the next annual meeting of shareholders of the corporation and
thereafter until the appointment of their successors. Each member of the Audit
Committee, the Compensation Committee and the Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee shall be an Outside Director, and not less than one-third
of the members of each other committee shall be Outside Directors. The Board may
by similar resolution designate one or more directors as alternate members of
such committees, who may replace any absent member or members at any meeting of
such committees; provided, however, that the membership of the committee shall
satisfy the preceding sentence following such designation. Vacancies in the
membership or chairmanship of any standing committee may be filled in the same
manner as original designations at any regular or special meeting of the Board,
and the chief executive officer may designate from among the remaining members
of any standing committee whose chairmanship is vacant a chairman who shall
serve until a successor is designated by the Board.

           Section 3.3 Notices of Times of Meetings of Standing Committees and
Presiding Officers. Meetings of each standing committee shall be held upon call
of the chief executive officer, or upon call of the chairman of such standing
committee or two members of such standing committee. Meetings of each standing
committee may also be held at such other times as it may determine. Meetings of
a standing committee shall be


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held at such places and upon such notice as it shall determine or as shall be
specified in the calls of such meetings. Any such chairman, if present, or such
member or members of each committee as may be designated by the chief executive
officer, shall preside at meetings thereof or, in the event of the absence or
disability of any thereof or failing such designation, the committee shall
select from among its members present a presiding officer.

           Section 3.4 Quorum. At each meeting of any standing committee there
shall be present to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business at least
a majority of the members but in no event less than three members, at least one
of whom shall be an Outside Director. Subject to the preceding sentence, any
alternate member who is replacing an absent member shall be counted in
determining whether a quorum is present. The vote of a majority of the members
present at a meeting of any standing committee at the time of the vote, if a
quorum is present at such time, shall be the act of such committee.

           Section 3.5 Standing Committee Minutes. Each of the standing
committees shall keep minutes of its meetings which shall be reported to the
Board at its regular meetings and, if called for by the Board, at any special
meeting.

           Section 3.6 Executive Committee. The Executive Committee shall make
recommendations to the Board with respect to the policyholder dividend and
surplus policies and practices of the corporation and, during the intervals
between meetings of the Board, except as otherwise provided in Section 3.12,
shall have and may exercise the authority of the Board in the management of the
property, business and affairs of the corporation, including the authority to
declare dividends in respect of the corporation's stock.

           Section 3.7 Investment Committee. The Investment Committee, subject
to and as may be provided in any resolution of the Board, shall have and may
exercise the authority of the Board with respect to the management of the assets
of the corporation, including purchases and sales thereof, the manner of
designating depositaries for all monies received by the corporation, which shall
be deposited in the name of the corporation, and the manner of disposition of
the funds of the corporation so deposited.

           Section 3.8 Compensation Committee. The Compensation Committee shall
recommend to the Board the selection of all principal officers (as determined by
the Committee) and such other officers as the Committee may determine to elect
or appoint as officers, shall evaluate the performance and recommend to the
Board the compensation of such principal officers and such other officers as the
Committee may determine, and shall recommend to the Board any plan to issue
options for the purchase of shares of the corporation's stock to its officers or
employees. Except as otherwise provided in any resolution of the Board, the
Committee shall have and may exercise all the authority of the Board with
respect to compensation, benefits and personnel administration of the


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employees of the corporation and may elect or appoint officers as provided in
Section 4.2 of these By-Laws.

           Section 3.9 Audit Committee. The Audit Committee shall have and may
exercise the authority of the Board: to recommend to the Board the selection of
the corporation's independent certified public accountants; to review the scope,
plans and results relating to the internal and external audits of the
corporation and its financial statements; and to review the financial condition
of the corporation. Except as otherwise provided in any resolution of the Board,
the Committee shall have and may exercise the authority of the Board: to monitor
and evaluate the integrity of the corporation's financial reporting processes
and procedures; to assess the significant business and financial risks and
exposures of the corporation and to evaluate the adequacy of the corporation's
internal controls in connection with such risks and exposures, including, but
not limited to, accounting and audit controls over cash, securities, receipts,
disbursements and other financial transactions; and to review the corporation's
policies on ethical business conduct and monitor compliance therewith.

           Section 3.10 Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. The
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee shall nominate candidates for
Director for election by shareholders and for filling vacancies on the Board,
and may recommend to the Board any plan to issue options for the purchase of
shares of the corporation's stock to its non-employee directors. Except as
otherwise provided in any resolution of the Board, the Committee shall review
and make recommendations to the Board with respect to the organization,
structure, size, composition and operation of the Board and its Committees,
including, but not limited to, the compensation for non-employee directors and
shall review and make recommendations with respect to other corporate governance
matters and matters that relate to the corporation's status as a member of a
publicly-traded group of companies.

           Section 3.11 Special Committees. The Board may, by resolution adopted
by a majority of the then authorized number of directors, designate special
committees, each consisting of three or more directors of the corporation, which
committees, except as otherwise prescribed by law or by Section 3.12, shall have
and may exercise the authority of the Board to the extent provided in the
resolutions designating such committees. Nothing herein shall be deemed to
prevent the chief executive officer from appointing one or more special
committees of directors for the purpose of advising the chief executive officer;
provided, however, that no such committee shall have or may exercise any
authority of the Board.

           Section 3.12 Limitations of the Authority of Committees.
Notwithstanding any other provisions of these By-Laws, no committee shall have
authority as to the following matters:


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           (1)  the submission to shareholders of any action that needs
                shareholder approval under applicable law;

           (2)  the filling of vacancies in the Board or in any committee;

           (3)  the fixing of compensation of the directors for serving on the
                Board or on any committee;

           (4)  the amendment or repeal of these By-Laws or adoption of new
                By-Laws; and

           (5)  the amendment or repeal of any resolution of the Board which by
                its terms shall not be so amendable or repealable.


                                   ARTICLE IV

                                    OFFICERS

           Section 4.1 Chief Executive Officer. The Board shall determine whom
from among the officer directors shall act as Chief Executive Officer.

           Subject to the control of the Board and to the extent not otherwise
prescribed by these By-Laws, the Chief Executive Officer shall supervise the
carrying out of the policies adopted or approved by the Board, shall manage the
business of the Company and shall possess such other powers and perform such
other duties as may be incident to the office of chief executive officer.

           Section 4.2 Other Officers. In addition to the Chief Executive
Officer, the Board shall elect or appoint a Chairman, a President, one or more
Vice-Presidents, a Chief Financial Officer, a Secretary, a Treasurer, a
Controller and a General Counsel, and such other officers as it may deem
appropriate, except that officers of the rank of Vice-President and below may be
elected or appointed by the Compensation Committee of the Board. Officers other
than the Chief Executive Officer shall have such powers and perform such duties
as may be authorized by these By-Laws or by or pursuant to authorization of the
Board or the Chief Executive Officer.

           All officers shall hold office at the pleasure of the Board.


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                                    ARTICLE V

                               EXECUTION OF PAPERS

           Section 5.1 Instruments. Any officer, or any employee or agent
designated for the purpose by the Chief Executive Officer, or a designee of the
Chief Executive Officer, shall have power to execute all instruments in writing
necessary or desirable for the corporation to execute in the transaction and
management of its business and affairs (including, without limitation, contracts
and agreements, transfers of bonds, stocks, notes and other securities, proxies,
powers of attorney, deeds, leases, releases, satisfactions and instruments
entitled to be recorded in any jurisdiction, but excluding, to the extent
otherwise provided for in these By-Laws, authorizations for the disposition of
the funds of the corporation deposited in its name and policies, contracts,
agreements, amendments and endorsements of, for or in connection with insurance
or annuities) and to affix the corporate seal.

           Section 5.2 Disposition of Funds. All funds of the corporation
deposited in its name shall be subject to disposition by check or other means,
in such manner as the Investment Committee may determine.

           Section 5.3 Policies. All policies, contracts, agreements, amendments
and endorsements, executed by the corporation as insurer, of, for or in
connection with insurance or annuities shall bear such signature or signatures
of such officer or officers as may be designated for the purpose by the Board.

           Section 5.4 Facsimile Signatures. All instruments necessary or
desirable for the corporation to execute in the transaction and management of
its business and affairs, including those set forth in Sections 5.2 and 5.3 of
these By-Laws, may be executed by use of or bear facsimile signatures as and to
the extent authorized by the Board or a committee thereof or the chief executive
officer. If any officer or employee whose facsimile signature has been placed
upon any form of instrument shall have ceased to be such officer or employee
before an instrument in such form is issued, such instrument may be issued with
the same effect as if such person had been such officer or employee at the time
of its issue.


                                   ARTICLE VI

                                  CAPITAL STOCK

           Section 6.1 Certificates of Shares. Every holder of shares in the
corporation shall be entitled to have a certificate (unless such shares shall be
uncertificated shares) signed by, or in the name of the corporation by (i) the
Chairman of the Board, the President or a Vice-President, and (ii) by the
Treasurer or an Assistant Treasurer, or the


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Secretary or an Assistant Secretary, certifying the number of shares owned by
him or her in the corporation. Such certificate shall be in such form as the
Board may determine, to the extent consistent with applicable provisions of law,
the Charter and these By-Laws. Within a reasonable time after the issuance of
uncertificated shares, the corporation shall send to the registered owner
thereof a written notice containing the information required to be set forth or
stated on certificates.

           Section 6.2 Lost, Stolen or Destroyed Certificates. The Board may
direct that a new certificate be issued in place of any certificate previously
issued by the corporation alleged to have been lost, stolen or destroyed, upon
delivery to the Board of an affidavit of the owner or owners of such
certificate, setting forth such allegation. The Board may require the owner of
such lost, stolen or destroyed certificate, or such owner's legal
representative, to give the corporation a bond sufficient to indemnify it
against any claim that may be made against it on account of the alleged loss,
theft or destruction of any such certificate or the issuance of any such new
certificate.

           Section 6.3 Transfers of Stock; Registered Shareholders. Shares of
stock of the corporation shall be transferable only upon the books of the
corporation kept for such purpose upon surrender to the corporation or its
transfer agent or agents of a certificate (unless such shares shall be
uncertificated shares) representing shares, duly endorsed or accompanied by
appropriate evidence of succession, assignment or authority to transfer. Within
a reasonable time after the transfer of uncertificated shares, the corporation
shall send to the registered owner thereof a written notice containing the
information required to be set forth or stated on certificates.

           The Board, subject to these By-laws, may make such rules, regulations
and conditions as it may deem expedient concerning the subscription for, issue,
transfer and registration of, shares of stock. Except as otherwise provided by
law, the corporation, prior to due presentment for registration of transfer, may
treat the registered owner of shares as the person exclusively entitled to vote,
to receive notifications, and otherwise to exercise all the rights and powers of
an owner.

           Section 6.4 Record Date. For the purpose of determining the
shareholders entitled to notice of or to vote at any meeting of shareholders or
any adjournment thereof, or to express consent to or dissent from any proposal
or corporate action in writing without a meeting, or entitled to receive payment
of any dividend or other distribution or allotment of any rights, or entitled to
exercise any rights in respect of any change, conversion or exchange of shares
or for the purpose of any other lawful action, the Board may fix, in advance, a
record date, which shall not be more than sixty days nor less than ten days
before the date of such meeting, nor more than fifty days prior to any other
action.

           Section 6.5 Transfer Agent and Registrar. The Board may appoint one
or more transfer agents and one or more registrars, and may require all
certificates representing


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shares to bear the signature of any such transfer agents or registrar. The same
person may act as transfer agent and registrar for the corporation.

           Section 6.6 Dividends. Subject to any applicable provisions of law
and the Charter, dividends or other distributions upon the outstanding shares of
the corporation may be declared by the Board at any regular or special meeting
of the Board, or by the Executive Committee as provided in Section 3.6, and any
such dividend or distribution may be paid in cash, property, bonds or shares of
the corporation, including the bonds or shares of other corporations, except as
limited by applicable law.


                                   ARTICLE VII

                                     GENERAL

           Section 7.1 Indemnification of Directors and Officers. To the full
extent permitted by the laws of the State of New York, the corporation shall
indemnify any person made or threatened to be made a party to any action or
proceeding, whether civil or criminal, by reason of the fact that such person,
or such person's testator or intestate,

           (1)  is or was a director or officer of the corporation, or

           (2)  serves or served another corporation, partnership, joint
                venture, trust, employee benefit plan or other enterprise in any
                capacity at the request of the corporation, and also is or was a
                director or officer of the corporation, against judgments,
                fines, amounts paid in settlement and reasonable expenses,
                including attorneys' fees, actually and necessarily incurred
                in connection with or as a result of such action or
                proceeding, or any appeal therein.


                                  ARTICLE VIII

                              AMENDMENT OF BY-LAWS

           Section 8.1 Amendments. These By-Laws or any of them may be amended,
altered or repealed by the Board at any regular or special meeting if written
notice setting forth the proposed amendment, alteration or repeal shall have
been mailed to all directors at least five days before the meeting or upon the
affirmative vote by the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares;
provided, however, that Section 7.1 of these By-Laws may not be amended, altered
or repealed by the Board or the shareholders so as to affect adversely any then
existing rights of any director or officer.


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                                                                   Exhibit 6(a)

                                                      March 24, 2000

Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
One Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10010

Dear Sirs:

This opinion is furnished in connection with the filing of Post-Effective
Amendment No. 11 to Registration Statement No. 33-47927 on Form S-6
("Registration Statement"), which covers premiums received under the Flexible
Premium Multifunded Life Insurance policies (FPMLI) offered by Metropolitan
Life Insurance Company ("MLIC") in each State where they have been approved by
appropriate State insurance authorities. As a Vice-President and Actuary of
MLIC, I have reviewed the FPMLI forms and I am familiar with the Registration
Statement and Exhibits thereto. In my opinion the illustrations of FPMLI death
benefits, cash values and cash surrender values in Exhibit 1(A)(5)(g) included
in the Registration Statement, based on the assumptions stated therein, are
consistent with the provisions of the FPMLI forms. Also, in my opinion, the
amounts assumed in the illustrations for current policy charges (including UL-
2001's decrease in mortality and expense risk charge after 10 years) remain
reasonable, based on MLIC's current expectations. The policies have not been
designed so as to make the relationship between premiums and benefits, as
shown in these illustrations, appear to be disproportionately more favorable
to a prospective purchaser of the FPMLI for standard risk males age 35, than
to prospective purchasers of FPMLI for a male at other ages or in other
underwriting classes or for a female. Nor have the particular illustrations
shown been selected for the purpose of making that relationship appear more
favorable.

I hereby consent to the use of this opinion as an exhibit to the Registration
Statement and to the reference to my name under the heading "Legal, Accounting
and Actuarial Matters" in the prospectuses contained in the Registration
Statement.

                                          Very truly yours,

                                          /s/ Marian Zeldin

                                          Marian Zeldin
                                          Vice President and Actuary


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